Throughout North America, thousands of individuals have been incarcerated for crimes they did not commit, or crimes that never occurred. The literature on wrongful convictions has largely addressed how eyewitness testimony, tunnel vision, forensic errors, and false confessions contribute to wrongful convictions. However, this growing body of research largely neglects the experiences of exonerees and their re-integration into the society that turned on them. This study addresses this deficit in the literature by analyzing case characteristics and demographics of the dozens of known exonerees in Canada. By analyzing demographics such as race, education, age, and gender, we can begin to determine risk factors, how incarceration and wrongful co...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Despite the checks and balances of our criminal justice system many cases of wrongful convictions ha...
Background: Exonerees are individuals who have been wrongfully convicted of a crime. Later found inn...
The past three decades have seen at least 3,200 exonerations across North America. While this number...
Criminal justice systems around the world depend on their ability to accurately convict the guilty, ...
Scholars studying wrongful convictions have long examined their causes and the ways in which to prev...
Researchers identify possible structural causes for wrongful convictions: racism, justice system cul...
Expunging a criminal conviction in the United States is a rare event and often limited to persons wh...
We adapt the victimology of ‗state harms ‘ framework outlined by Kauzlarich et al. (Critical Crimino...
Previous literature has indicated that wrongful conviction is estimated to occur in about 1 to 5 per...
Only a few studies have investigated the psychological consequences of wrongful conviction; several ...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Chapter 2 examines the critical role DNA analysis has played in exonerating the wrongfully convicted...
Black Americans account for 61% of those who have been released from prison through DNA exoneration....
As the discovery of wrongful convictions grows, so does concern in the legal community and public sp...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Despite the checks and balances of our criminal justice system many cases of wrongful convictions ha...
Background: Exonerees are individuals who have been wrongfully convicted of a crime. Later found inn...
The past three decades have seen at least 3,200 exonerations across North America. While this number...
Criminal justice systems around the world depend on their ability to accurately convict the guilty, ...
Scholars studying wrongful convictions have long examined their causes and the ways in which to prev...
Researchers identify possible structural causes for wrongful convictions: racism, justice system cul...
Expunging a criminal conviction in the United States is a rare event and often limited to persons wh...
We adapt the victimology of ‗state harms ‘ framework outlined by Kauzlarich et al. (Critical Crimino...
Previous literature has indicated that wrongful conviction is estimated to occur in about 1 to 5 per...
Only a few studies have investigated the psychological consequences of wrongful conviction; several ...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Chapter 2 examines the critical role DNA analysis has played in exonerating the wrongfully convicted...
Black Americans account for 61% of those who have been released from prison through DNA exoneration....
As the discovery of wrongful convictions grows, so does concern in the legal community and public sp...
The Innocence Project has exonerated only four women out of their first 250 cases. Even with the inc...
Despite the checks and balances of our criminal justice system many cases of wrongful convictions ha...
Background: Exonerees are individuals who have been wrongfully convicted of a crime. Later found inn...