In recent years, federal and state-level criminal justice reforms have softened the punitive responses to crime that defined the quarter-century from 1980–2005. The main beneficiaries of these reforms have been non-violent criminals, who are increasingly eligible for pre- and post-charge diversion, expungement, early release from custody and early discharge from community supervision. For those convicted of violent offenses, not much has changed: sentences remain long; opportunities for release remain few; and conditions of post-release supervision are tightly enforced, leading to high rates of return to prison. The justification for a harsh response to violent crime is that such crime inflicts significant harm and represents a dramatic dev...
This investigation will examine the ways of thinking that facilitated the enactment of harsh sentenc...
Two of the major social issues demanding attention from the criminal justice system today are violen...
Although much research has been conducted on violence, its effects, and which circumstances put an i...
In recent years, federal and state-level criminal justice reforms have softened the punitive respons...
Evidence suggests that the public favors tough punishment for individuals who have been convicted of...
This Article reviews what is known from the field of criminology about the nature of crime patterns ...
People convicted of violent crimes constitute a majority of the imprisoned population but are genera...
Two decades of criminal-justice reform in the United States have achieved only a modest reduction in...
I propose a dual conceptualization of violent crime. Since violent crime is both violence and crime,...
Media stories of violent young offenders, while rare events, “signal” to the public that youth crime...
The movement to reduce over-prosecution and mass incarceration has focused almost exclusively on non...
Evidence suggests that the public favors tough punishment for individuals who have been convicted of...
From the mid-twentieth century, state and public conceptions of deviance and crime control have turn...
For many years, American legislatures have been steadily attaching a wide range of legal consequence...
This investigation will examine the ways of thinking that facilitated the enactment of harsh sentenc...
Two of the major social issues demanding attention from the criminal justice system today are violen...
Although much research has been conducted on violence, its effects, and which circumstances put an i...
In recent years, federal and state-level criminal justice reforms have softened the punitive respons...
Evidence suggests that the public favors tough punishment for individuals who have been convicted of...
This Article reviews what is known from the field of criminology about the nature of crime patterns ...
People convicted of violent crimes constitute a majority of the imprisoned population but are genera...
Two decades of criminal-justice reform in the United States have achieved only a modest reduction in...
I propose a dual conceptualization of violent crime. Since violent crime is both violence and crime,...
Media stories of violent young offenders, while rare events, “signal” to the public that youth crime...
The movement to reduce over-prosecution and mass incarceration has focused almost exclusively on non...
Evidence suggests that the public favors tough punishment for individuals who have been convicted of...
From the mid-twentieth century, state and public conceptions of deviance and crime control have turn...
For many years, American legislatures have been steadily attaching a wide range of legal consequence...
This investigation will examine the ways of thinking that facilitated the enactment of harsh sentenc...
Two of the major social issues demanding attention from the criminal justice system today are violen...
Although much research has been conducted on violence, its effects, and which circumstances put an i...