In 1992, the Judicial Conference of the United States ( JCUS ) adopted a resolution encouraging the examination of bias based on race, ethnicity, gender, age and disability in the federal judiciary. The Ninth Circuit responded to the JCUS resolution with a study of gender bias, completed in 1993.2 Subsequently, the Ninth Circuit Judicial Conference authorized a second study, establishing the Task Force on Racial, Religious, and Ethnic Fairness in 1993.\u27 This study of pretrial detention in the Ninth Circuit was undertaken as part of the research commissioned by the Task Force
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
In 1990, the federal courts of the Ninth Circuit began to examine the effects of gender on the busin...
Bail and pretrial detention decisions may have important consequences for racial disparities in inca...
In 1992, the Judicial Conference of the United States ( JCUS ) adopted a resolution encouraging the ...
This study analyzes pretrial release data on a sample of felony defendants representing the nation’s...
This research focuses on judicial decision-making in the federal courts to determine whether unwarra...
In October 1993, in response to a recommendation in the Report of the National Commission on Judicia...
In 1993, at the request of then Chief Judge Jon O. Newman, the Judicial Council of the Second Circui...
The 14th Amendment guarantees that Americans are all equal under the law, but in reality this is oft...
Nationwide, there is a systemic problem with bail determination: the process that a citizen goes thr...
Research has shown that youth of color are over-represented at every stage of the U.S. juvenile just...
Overrepresentation of minorities within the justice system is an on-going, nationwide problem (Harri...
The uniquely American phenomenon of mass incarceration plagues the pretrial space. People awaiting t...
Previous research on bail practices has shown that both legal factors, such as offense severity and ...
The current study seeks to identify significant predictors of pretrial processing for both male and ...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
In 1990, the federal courts of the Ninth Circuit began to examine the effects of gender on the busin...
Bail and pretrial detention decisions may have important consequences for racial disparities in inca...
In 1992, the Judicial Conference of the United States ( JCUS ) adopted a resolution encouraging the ...
This study analyzes pretrial release data on a sample of felony defendants representing the nation’s...
This research focuses on judicial decision-making in the federal courts to determine whether unwarra...
In October 1993, in response to a recommendation in the Report of the National Commission on Judicia...
In 1993, at the request of then Chief Judge Jon O. Newman, the Judicial Council of the Second Circui...
The 14th Amendment guarantees that Americans are all equal under the law, but in reality this is oft...
Nationwide, there is a systemic problem with bail determination: the process that a citizen goes thr...
Research has shown that youth of color are over-represented at every stage of the U.S. juvenile just...
Overrepresentation of minorities within the justice system is an on-going, nationwide problem (Harri...
The uniquely American phenomenon of mass incarceration plagues the pretrial space. People awaiting t...
Previous research on bail practices has shown that both legal factors, such as offense severity and ...
The current study seeks to identify significant predictors of pretrial processing for both male and ...
Beginning with the state courts of New Jersey in 1984, almost every state in the country and numerou...
In 1990, the federal courts of the Ninth Circuit began to examine the effects of gender on the busin...
Bail and pretrial detention decisions may have important consequences for racial disparities in inca...