This article focuses on the self-legitimation strategies of frontline prosecutors working in a Northeastern city in the United States (‘Belton’). The research took place in a self-described ‘progressive’ prosecutor’s office in the midst of a legitimacy crisis that prosecutors faced across the country. The prosecutors in Belton spoke about their role and practices in the face of this legitimacy crisis through a strategy of differentiation from other criminal justice actors, aimed at establishing their purported positional and moral superiority in enacting criminal justice practices, and through minimizing their responsibility for the systemic harms that prosecutors more generally have been said to perpetuate
What role should prosecutors play in promoting citizenship within a liberal democracy? And how can a...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...
Prosecutors often express mistrust of professional regulators, their rules and their processes. This...
This article focuses on prosecutors’ practices of drafting, critiquing and revising opening and clos...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
For decades, legal commentators sounded the alarm about the tremendous power wielded by prosecutors....
For nearly 100 years courts and legal scholars have held prosecutors to the “justice” standard, mean...
This Article describes the rhetorical and regulatory changes that characterize the new prosecutorial...
There are inherent tensions between conceptions of public prosecutors as elected officials who respo...
The power and prestige of the American prosecutor have changed dramatically over the past twenty yea...
This article concerns the prosecution of defensive dishonesty in the course of federal investigation...
This note seeks to examine the tripartite relationship between legislative delegation, prosecutorial...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
This article offers an unprecedented empirical window into prosecutorial discretion drawing on long-...
What role should prosecutors play in promoting citizenship within a liberal democracy? And how can a...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...
Prosecutors often express mistrust of professional regulators, their rules and their processes. This...
This article focuses on prosecutors’ practices of drafting, critiquing and revising opening and clos...
One of the predominant themes in the criminal justice literature is that prosecutors dominate the ju...
For decades, legal commentators sounded the alarm about the tremendous power wielded by prosecutors....
For nearly 100 years courts and legal scholars have held prosecutors to the “justice” standard, mean...
This Article describes the rhetorical and regulatory changes that characterize the new prosecutorial...
There are inherent tensions between conceptions of public prosecutors as elected officials who respo...
The power and prestige of the American prosecutor have changed dramatically over the past twenty yea...
This article concerns the prosecution of defensive dishonesty in the course of federal investigation...
This note seeks to examine the tripartite relationship between legislative delegation, prosecutorial...
Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. The decisions t...
This article offers an unprecedented empirical window into prosecutorial discretion drawing on long-...
What role should prosecutors play in promoting citizenship within a liberal democracy? And how can a...
No government official has as much unreviewable power or discretion as the prosecutor. Few regulatio...
A discussion of restorative justice and its relation to prosecutorial discretion. The article gives...