Rehabilitating Criminal Justice
Innovations in Policing, Adjudication, and Sentencing
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Mar '25
£95.00
This title is due to be published on 31st March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£30.99(9781009586924)
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This book explains how the criminal justice system can be fixed, in ways that simultaneously protect suspects, victims and society.
Every aspect of the US criminal legal system, from policing to sentencing, is in disarray. This book proffers a reform agenda that reduces the harms of policing without handcuffing law enforcement, ensures conviction of the guilty while protecting the innocent, and slashes prison populations without undermining public safety.Rehabilitating Criminal Justice offers bold yet sensible proposals for reforming every major component of the US criminal justice system. The first third of the book explains how existing caselaw can be interpreted to end over-policing, better regulate interrogations, and replace the exclusionary rule with direct sanctions on officers and their departments. The second part of the book, on the post-arrest adjudication process, calls for replacing cash bail with validated risk assessments and proposes to reorient our error-prone, hyper-adversarial system by ending convictions via guilty pleas and giving judges more power over questioning of witnesses and the selection of experts. The final chapters show how the harshness of the system can be leavened by refocusing sentencing on prevention rather than retribution and by creating an independent criminal court system. They also explain why these reforms are preferable to the currently popular movement to defund police departments and abolish prisons.
ISBN: 9781009586948
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
320 pages