This symposium [A Symposium on Prisons and Correctional Law (Part I)] sponsored by the law college is most timely, as new attention is being given to what lies beyond once an offender is brought to justice. Punishment, control, rehabilitation, more diversified facilities, better-trained staffs, wider range of inmate programs, collaboration with other institutions, community employment or training, and more are included
This special issue on prison litigation is well-timed. As Tinsley Yarbrough notes in The Alabama Pr...
Incarcerating Criminals places prisons and jails in the context of their social and organizational e...
In this integrated symposium session, the panelists will interact with each other and with participa...
This symposium [A Symposium on Prisons and Correctional Law (Part I)] sponsored by the law college i...
Part I of the symposium The Tasks of Penology: A Symposium on Prisons and Correctional Law was int...
On April 5–6, 2017, the Monroe H. Freedman Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics hosted its inaugu...
Prisons and jails pose a significant challenge to the rule of law within American boundaries. As a n...
In recent months the Washington correctional system has come under aittack for failing to limit crim...
With over two million people behind bars, the United States has more people incarcerated than any ot...
"The symposium was supported by contract number J-LEAA-021-72 awarded by the National Institute of L...
Prisoners and the Law focuses on legal issues commonly affecting the prison population, including AI...
Of all the problems which face a public official there is none which is potentially more explosive t...
I N SEVERAL WAYS, the forthcoming chapters will examine the current state of the art of the correcti...
The administration of criminal justice consists of four major areas: the arrest and charge of the co...
The revision of American criminal legislation, both state and federal, has been for many years one o...
This special issue on prison litigation is well-timed. As Tinsley Yarbrough notes in The Alabama Pr...
Incarcerating Criminals places prisons and jails in the context of their social and organizational e...
In this integrated symposium session, the panelists will interact with each other and with participa...
This symposium [A Symposium on Prisons and Correctional Law (Part I)] sponsored by the law college i...
Part I of the symposium The Tasks of Penology: A Symposium on Prisons and Correctional Law was int...
On April 5–6, 2017, the Monroe H. Freedman Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics hosted its inaugu...
Prisons and jails pose a significant challenge to the rule of law within American boundaries. As a n...
In recent months the Washington correctional system has come under aittack for failing to limit crim...
With over two million people behind bars, the United States has more people incarcerated than any ot...
"The symposium was supported by contract number J-LEAA-021-72 awarded by the National Institute of L...
Prisoners and the Law focuses on legal issues commonly affecting the prison population, including AI...
Of all the problems which face a public official there is none which is potentially more explosive t...
I N SEVERAL WAYS, the forthcoming chapters will examine the current state of the art of the correcti...
The administration of criminal justice consists of four major areas: the arrest and charge of the co...
The revision of American criminal legislation, both state and federal, has been for many years one o...
This special issue on prison litigation is well-timed. As Tinsley Yarbrough notes in The Alabama Pr...
Incarcerating Criminals places prisons and jails in the context of their social and organizational e...
In this integrated symposium session, the panelists will interact with each other and with participa...