How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail reform movement, which aspires to limit pretrial detention to the truly dangerous—and which has looked to algorithmic risk assessments to quantify danger—has brought this question to the fore. Constitutional doctrine authorizes pretrial detention when the government’s interest in safety “outweighs” an individual’s interest in liberty, but it does not specify how to balance these goods. If detaining ten presumptively innocent people for three months is projected to prevent one robbery, is it worth it? This Article confronts the question of what degree of risk justifies pretrial preventive detention if one takes the consequentialist approach o...
Depriving an individual of life or liberty is one of the most intrusive powers that governments wiel...
Our current pretrial system imposes high costs on both the people who are detained pretrial and the ...
The traditional approaches to dangerous persons have been crime and commitment. The criminal law pun...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
Bail reform is gaining momentum nationwide. Reformers aspire to untether pretrial detention from wea...
Spending on U.S. incarceration has increased dramatically over the last several decades. Much of thi...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
Pretrial detention is a puzzling practice. The criminal justice system uses the trial as the mechani...
Today we know much more about the effects of pretrial detention than we did even five years ago. Mul...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
This article addresses the state's police power authority to deprive people of liberty based on pred...
Although detention for dangerousness has received far more attention in recent years, a significant ...
Comment in response to Catherine T. Struve, The Conditions of Pretrial Detention, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev....
Pretrial detention depends on weighing an unconvicted defendant’s right to freedom against the risk ...
This Article argues that the presumption that an actor will be law-abiding, like the right to libert...
Depriving an individual of life or liberty is one of the most intrusive powers that governments wiel...
Our current pretrial system imposes high costs on both the people who are detained pretrial and the ...
The traditional approaches to dangerous persons have been crime and commitment. The criminal law pun...
How dangerous must a person be to justify the state in locking her up for the greater good? The bail...
Bail reform is gaining momentum nationwide. Reformers aspire to untether pretrial detention from wea...
Spending on U.S. incarceration has increased dramatically over the last several decades. Much of thi...
This Article shows how the application of a takings paradigm to pretrial detention can mitigate the ...
Pretrial detention is a puzzling practice. The criminal justice system uses the trial as the mechani...
Today we know much more about the effects of pretrial detention than we did even five years ago. Mul...
This article, echoing Highmore\u27s treatise of 1783, maintains that neither a legitimate nor a very...
This article addresses the state's police power authority to deprive people of liberty based on pred...
Although detention for dangerousness has received far more attention in recent years, a significant ...
Comment in response to Catherine T. Struve, The Conditions of Pretrial Detention, 161 U. Pa. L. Rev....
Pretrial detention depends on weighing an unconvicted defendant’s right to freedom against the risk ...
This Article argues that the presumption that an actor will be law-abiding, like the right to libert...
Depriving an individual of life or liberty is one of the most intrusive powers that governments wiel...
Our current pretrial system imposes high costs on both the people who are detained pretrial and the ...
The traditional approaches to dangerous persons have been crime and commitment. The criminal law pun...