For the first time in forty years, the national incarceration rate is flattening out, even falling in state prisons. For the first time in three decades, the number of adults under any kind of correctional supervision—in prison or jail or on probation or parole—fell in 2009. At the same time, legal reforms that might have seemed impossible in prior years have increasingly been adopted, reducing penalties for certain crimes, eliminating mandatory sentencing for others, and increasing expenditures for reintegration of prisoners into society. And racial disparities, a persistent and deep-rooted problem in the American criminal justice system, after rising for decades, have begun to drop from their highest levels. This essay examines these tren...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
abstract: Debates about criminal justice have erupted onto the American political scene in recent ye...
The author explores the racist underpinnings of the prison system and states that if we, as a nation...
For the first time in forty years, the national incarceration rate is flattening out, even falling i...
(Excerpt) This Essay proposes “purpose-focused sentencing” as a means of remedying the over-incarcer...
(Excerpt) Over the past thirty years, the most important sentencing development has not been the leg...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States embarked on a shift in its penal policies, tripling the pe...
This Essay employs a variation of the “interest convergence” concept to examine the competing intere...
Criminals engender no community sympathy and have no political capital. This is part of the reason t...
In the United States today, incarceration is more than just a mode of criminal punishment. It is a d...
Mass incarceration is a term used to describe the United States locking up people in prisons and jai...
America has less than 5 percent of the world's population, but nearly 25 percent of its prisoners. O...
This article provides an overview of recent trends in imprisonment rates in America and introduces t...
We should all be grateful for Michael Tonry’s (2014, this issue) characteristically thoughtful artic...
Currently over 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the state prison system in the United States....
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
abstract: Debates about criminal justice have erupted onto the American political scene in recent ye...
The author explores the racist underpinnings of the prison system and states that if we, as a nation...
For the first time in forty years, the national incarceration rate is flattening out, even falling i...
(Excerpt) This Essay proposes “purpose-focused sentencing” as a means of remedying the over-incarcer...
(Excerpt) Over the past thirty years, the most important sentencing development has not been the leg...
Beginning in the 1970s, the United States embarked on a shift in its penal policies, tripling the pe...
This Essay employs a variation of the “interest convergence” concept to examine the competing intere...
Criminals engender no community sympathy and have no political capital. This is part of the reason t...
In the United States today, incarceration is more than just a mode of criminal punishment. It is a d...
Mass incarceration is a term used to describe the United States locking up people in prisons and jai...
America has less than 5 percent of the world's population, but nearly 25 percent of its prisoners. O...
This article provides an overview of recent trends in imprisonment rates in America and introduces t...
We should all be grateful for Michael Tonry’s (2014, this issue) characteristically thoughtful artic...
Currently over 2.4 million people are incarcerated in the state prison system in the United States....
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
abstract: Debates about criminal justice have erupted onto the American political scene in recent ye...
The author explores the racist underpinnings of the prison system and states that if we, as a nation...