Excessive Punishment
How the Justice System Creates Mass Incarceration
Herausgeber: Eisen, Lauren-Brooke
Excessive Punishment
How the Justice System Creates Mass Incarceration
Herausgeber: Eisen, Lauren-Brooke
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book brings together essays by scholars, practitioners, activists, and writers, including incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people, to explore the harms of making punishment the main response to social harm.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Women and Punishment60,99 €
- Patricia Faraldo CabanaMoney and the Governance of Punishment68,99 €
- Christopher MurrayUnusual Punishment21,99 €
- Toby SeddonPunishment and Madness78,99 €
- Bruce WesternPunishment and Inequality in America31,99 €
- Invisible Punishment23,99 €
- Race, Gender, and Punishment46,99 €
-
-
-
This book brings together essays by scholars, practitioners, activists, and writers, including incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people, to explore the harms of making punishment the main response to social harm.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. April 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm
- ISBN-13: 9780231212175
- ISBN-10: 0231212178
- Artikelnr.: 70522730
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Seitenzahl: 392
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. April 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm
- ISBN-13: 9780231212175
- ISBN-10: 0231212178
- Artikelnr.: 70522730
Edited by Lauren-Brooke Eisen
Introduction, by Lauren-Brooke Eisen
Part I. A History of Crime and Punitive Response
1. Addressing Violent Crime More Effectively, by David Alan Sklansky
2. Losing Our Punitive Civic Religion, by Jonathan Simon
3. Mass Incarceration and Victim Disregard: Two Sides of the Same Coin, by
Lenore Anderson
4. Crime, the Idea, by Emile DeWeaver
Part II. Federal Funding Drives Punitive Justice
5. The Federal Funding That Drives Mass Incarceration, by Lauren-Brooke
Eisen
6. The Role of Federal Funding in Improving American Justice, by Ed Chung
Part III. Prosecution and Sentencing
7. The Prosecutor Problem, by Paul Butler
8. The Trial Penalty: Coercive Plea Bargaining, by Martin Sabelli
9. End Mandatory Minimums, by Alison Siegler
10. The American "Punisher's Brain," by Andrew Cohen
11. Punishment Over Prevention: U.S. Drug Policy, by Morgan Godvin
12. Improving Sentencing Policies to Improve Trust and Legitimacy, by Adam
Gelb
Part IV. Racism and Punitive Excess
13. How Punitive Excess Is a Manifestation of Racism in America, by
Theodore R. Johnson
14. We Must End the Carcerality in Our Own Hearts, by Monica Bell
15. Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs, by Nkechi
Taifa
Part V. Uncovering Life Behind Prison Walls
16. How Atrocious Prison Conditions Make Us All Less Safe, by Shon Hopwood
17. What Did You Call Me?, by Rahsaan "New York" Thomas
18. The Inhumanity of Solitary Confinement, by Christopher Blackwell
19. A Culture of Abuse in Our Nation's Prisons and Jails, by Kathy
Foer-Morse
20. Surviving a Daily Storm, by Asia Johnson
21. COVID-19 and the Struggle for Health Behind Bars, by Homer Venters
22. Independent Oversight Is Essential for a Safe and Healthy Prison
System, by Michele Deitch
Part VI. Prison Reform in the United States
23. How Some European Prisons Are Based on Dignity Rather Than
Dehumanization, by Ram Subramanian
24. Embracing Dignity: Pennsylvania's Experiment with Scandinavian
Correctional Principles, by Steven L. Chanenson, Jordan M. Hyatt, and
Synøve N. Andersen
Part VII. Punishment of Young People
25. Treating All Kids as Kids, by Kim Taylor-Thompson
26. Treat Kids Like Kids: The United States Is One of the Only Countries
That Gives Life Sentences to Juveniles, by Michael Mendoza
Part VIII. Economic Injustice and Collateral Consequences
27. Monetary Sanctions as a Pound of Flesh, by Alexes Harris
28. Collateral Consequences and the Enduring Nature of Punishment, by
Cameron Kimble and Ames Grawert
29. Probation and Parole as Punishment, by Peggy McGarry
30. A Holistic Approach to Legal Advocacy, by Blake Strode
31. The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law, by Jennifer M. Chacón
32. Exploring Immigration Collateral Consequences Related to a Criminal
Conviction, by Khalil Cumberbatch
Part IX. Beyond Bars: Another World Is Possible
33. Providing Hope and Freedom to Overpunished People: Where Both Seem
Impossible to Achieve, by David Singleton
34. Countering Excessive Punishment with Chances for Redemption, by Carlton
Miller
35. Educating for Justice in the Era of Mass Incarceration, by Karol Mason
and Erica Bond
36. Redeeming Punishment in America, by Heather Rice-Minus
37. Criminal Justice Has Been and Must Remain Bipartisan to See Success, by
Jason Pye
38. No One Answer to Overpolicing and Mass Incarceration But Many, by Alia
Nahra and Hernandez Stroud
Conclusion: The Era of Punitive Excess, by Jeremy Travis and Bruce Western
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Index
Part I. A History of Crime and Punitive Response
1. Addressing Violent Crime More Effectively, by David Alan Sklansky
2. Losing Our Punitive Civic Religion, by Jonathan Simon
3. Mass Incarceration and Victim Disregard: Two Sides of the Same Coin, by
Lenore Anderson
4. Crime, the Idea, by Emile DeWeaver
Part II. Federal Funding Drives Punitive Justice
5. The Federal Funding That Drives Mass Incarceration, by Lauren-Brooke
Eisen
6. The Role of Federal Funding in Improving American Justice, by Ed Chung
Part III. Prosecution and Sentencing
7. The Prosecutor Problem, by Paul Butler
8. The Trial Penalty: Coercive Plea Bargaining, by Martin Sabelli
9. End Mandatory Minimums, by Alison Siegler
10. The American "Punisher's Brain," by Andrew Cohen
11. Punishment Over Prevention: U.S. Drug Policy, by Morgan Godvin
12. Improving Sentencing Policies to Improve Trust and Legitimacy, by Adam
Gelb
Part IV. Racism and Punitive Excess
13. How Punitive Excess Is a Manifestation of Racism in America, by
Theodore R. Johnson
14. We Must End the Carcerality in Our Own Hearts, by Monica Bell
15. Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs, by Nkechi
Taifa
Part V. Uncovering Life Behind Prison Walls
16. How Atrocious Prison Conditions Make Us All Less Safe, by Shon Hopwood
17. What Did You Call Me?, by Rahsaan "New York" Thomas
18. The Inhumanity of Solitary Confinement, by Christopher Blackwell
19. A Culture of Abuse in Our Nation's Prisons and Jails, by Kathy
Foer-Morse
20. Surviving a Daily Storm, by Asia Johnson
21. COVID-19 and the Struggle for Health Behind Bars, by Homer Venters
22. Independent Oversight Is Essential for a Safe and Healthy Prison
System, by Michele Deitch
Part VI. Prison Reform in the United States
23. How Some European Prisons Are Based on Dignity Rather Than
Dehumanization, by Ram Subramanian
24. Embracing Dignity: Pennsylvania's Experiment with Scandinavian
Correctional Principles, by Steven L. Chanenson, Jordan M. Hyatt, and
Synøve N. Andersen
Part VII. Punishment of Young People
25. Treating All Kids as Kids, by Kim Taylor-Thompson
26. Treat Kids Like Kids: The United States Is One of the Only Countries
That Gives Life Sentences to Juveniles, by Michael Mendoza
Part VIII. Economic Injustice and Collateral Consequences
27. Monetary Sanctions as a Pound of Flesh, by Alexes Harris
28. Collateral Consequences and the Enduring Nature of Punishment, by
Cameron Kimble and Ames Grawert
29. Probation and Parole as Punishment, by Peggy McGarry
30. A Holistic Approach to Legal Advocacy, by Blake Strode
31. The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law, by Jennifer M. Chacón
32. Exploring Immigration Collateral Consequences Related to a Criminal
Conviction, by Khalil Cumberbatch
Part IX. Beyond Bars: Another World Is Possible
33. Providing Hope and Freedom to Overpunished People: Where Both Seem
Impossible to Achieve, by David Singleton
34. Countering Excessive Punishment with Chances for Redemption, by Carlton
Miller
35. Educating for Justice in the Era of Mass Incarceration, by Karol Mason
and Erica Bond
36. Redeeming Punishment in America, by Heather Rice-Minus
37. Criminal Justice Has Been and Must Remain Bipartisan to See Success, by
Jason Pye
38. No One Answer to Overpolicing and Mass Incarceration But Many, by Alia
Nahra and Hernandez Stroud
Conclusion: The Era of Punitive Excess, by Jeremy Travis and Bruce Western
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Index
Introduction, by Lauren-Brooke Eisen
Part I. A History of Crime and Punitive Response
1. Addressing Violent Crime More Effectively, by David Alan Sklansky
2. Losing Our Punitive Civic Religion, by Jonathan Simon
3. Mass Incarceration and Victim Disregard: Two Sides of the Same Coin, by
Lenore Anderson
4. Crime, the Idea, by Emile DeWeaver
Part II. Federal Funding Drives Punitive Justice
5. The Federal Funding That Drives Mass Incarceration, by Lauren-Brooke
Eisen
6. The Role of Federal Funding in Improving American Justice, by Ed Chung
Part III. Prosecution and Sentencing
7. The Prosecutor Problem, by Paul Butler
8. The Trial Penalty: Coercive Plea Bargaining, by Martin Sabelli
9. End Mandatory Minimums, by Alison Siegler
10. The American "Punisher's Brain," by Andrew Cohen
11. Punishment Over Prevention: U.S. Drug Policy, by Morgan Godvin
12. Improving Sentencing Policies to Improve Trust and Legitimacy, by Adam
Gelb
Part IV. Racism and Punitive Excess
13. How Punitive Excess Is a Manifestation of Racism in America, by
Theodore R. Johnson
14. We Must End the Carcerality in Our Own Hearts, by Monica Bell
15. Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs, by Nkechi
Taifa
Part V. Uncovering Life Behind Prison Walls
16. How Atrocious Prison Conditions Make Us All Less Safe, by Shon Hopwood
17. What Did You Call Me?, by Rahsaan "New York" Thomas
18. The Inhumanity of Solitary Confinement, by Christopher Blackwell
19. A Culture of Abuse in Our Nation's Prisons and Jails, by Kathy
Foer-Morse
20. Surviving a Daily Storm, by Asia Johnson
21. COVID-19 and the Struggle for Health Behind Bars, by Homer Venters
22. Independent Oversight Is Essential for a Safe and Healthy Prison
System, by Michele Deitch
Part VI. Prison Reform in the United States
23. How Some European Prisons Are Based on Dignity Rather Than
Dehumanization, by Ram Subramanian
24. Embracing Dignity: Pennsylvania's Experiment with Scandinavian
Correctional Principles, by Steven L. Chanenson, Jordan M. Hyatt, and
Synøve N. Andersen
Part VII. Punishment of Young People
25. Treating All Kids as Kids, by Kim Taylor-Thompson
26. Treat Kids Like Kids: The United States Is One of the Only Countries
That Gives Life Sentences to Juveniles, by Michael Mendoza
Part VIII. Economic Injustice and Collateral Consequences
27. Monetary Sanctions as a Pound of Flesh, by Alexes Harris
28. Collateral Consequences and the Enduring Nature of Punishment, by
Cameron Kimble and Ames Grawert
29. Probation and Parole as Punishment, by Peggy McGarry
30. A Holistic Approach to Legal Advocacy, by Blake Strode
31. The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law, by Jennifer M. Chacón
32. Exploring Immigration Collateral Consequences Related to a Criminal
Conviction, by Khalil Cumberbatch
Part IX. Beyond Bars: Another World Is Possible
33. Providing Hope and Freedom to Overpunished People: Where Both Seem
Impossible to Achieve, by David Singleton
34. Countering Excessive Punishment with Chances for Redemption, by Carlton
Miller
35. Educating for Justice in the Era of Mass Incarceration, by Karol Mason
and Erica Bond
36. Redeeming Punishment in America, by Heather Rice-Minus
37. Criminal Justice Has Been and Must Remain Bipartisan to See Success, by
Jason Pye
38. No One Answer to Overpolicing and Mass Incarceration But Many, by Alia
Nahra and Hernandez Stroud
Conclusion: The Era of Punitive Excess, by Jeremy Travis and Bruce Western
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Index
Part I. A History of Crime and Punitive Response
1. Addressing Violent Crime More Effectively, by David Alan Sklansky
2. Losing Our Punitive Civic Religion, by Jonathan Simon
3. Mass Incarceration and Victim Disregard: Two Sides of the Same Coin, by
Lenore Anderson
4. Crime, the Idea, by Emile DeWeaver
Part II. Federal Funding Drives Punitive Justice
5. The Federal Funding That Drives Mass Incarceration, by Lauren-Brooke
Eisen
6. The Role of Federal Funding in Improving American Justice, by Ed Chung
Part III. Prosecution and Sentencing
7. The Prosecutor Problem, by Paul Butler
8. The Trial Penalty: Coercive Plea Bargaining, by Martin Sabelli
9. End Mandatory Minimums, by Alison Siegler
10. The American "Punisher's Brain," by Andrew Cohen
11. Punishment Over Prevention: U.S. Drug Policy, by Morgan Godvin
12. Improving Sentencing Policies to Improve Trust and Legitimacy, by Adam
Gelb
Part IV. Racism and Punitive Excess
13. How Punitive Excess Is a Manifestation of Racism in America, by
Theodore R. Johnson
14. We Must End the Carcerality in Our Own Hearts, by Monica Bell
15. Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs, by Nkechi
Taifa
Part V. Uncovering Life Behind Prison Walls
16. How Atrocious Prison Conditions Make Us All Less Safe, by Shon Hopwood
17. What Did You Call Me?, by Rahsaan "New York" Thomas
18. The Inhumanity of Solitary Confinement, by Christopher Blackwell
19. A Culture of Abuse in Our Nation's Prisons and Jails, by Kathy
Foer-Morse
20. Surviving a Daily Storm, by Asia Johnson
21. COVID-19 and the Struggle for Health Behind Bars, by Homer Venters
22. Independent Oversight Is Essential for a Safe and Healthy Prison
System, by Michele Deitch
Part VI. Prison Reform in the United States
23. How Some European Prisons Are Based on Dignity Rather Than
Dehumanization, by Ram Subramanian
24. Embracing Dignity: Pennsylvania's Experiment with Scandinavian
Correctional Principles, by Steven L. Chanenson, Jordan M. Hyatt, and
Synøve N. Andersen
Part VII. Punishment of Young People
25. Treating All Kids as Kids, by Kim Taylor-Thompson
26. Treat Kids Like Kids: The United States Is One of the Only Countries
That Gives Life Sentences to Juveniles, by Michael Mendoza
Part VIII. Economic Injustice and Collateral Consequences
27. Monetary Sanctions as a Pound of Flesh, by Alexes Harris
28. Collateral Consequences and the Enduring Nature of Punishment, by
Cameron Kimble and Ames Grawert
29. Probation and Parole as Punishment, by Peggy McGarry
30. A Holistic Approach to Legal Advocacy, by Blake Strode
31. The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law, by Jennifer M. Chacón
32. Exploring Immigration Collateral Consequences Related to a Criminal
Conviction, by Khalil Cumberbatch
Part IX. Beyond Bars: Another World Is Possible
33. Providing Hope and Freedom to Overpunished People: Where Both Seem
Impossible to Achieve, by David Singleton
34. Countering Excessive Punishment with Chances for Redemption, by Carlton
Miller
35. Educating for Justice in the Era of Mass Incarceration, by Karol Mason
and Erica Bond
36. Redeeming Punishment in America, by Heather Rice-Minus
37. Criminal Justice Has Been and Must Remain Bipartisan to See Success, by
Jason Pye
38. No One Answer to Overpolicing and Mass Incarceration But Many, by Alia
Nahra and Hernandez Stroud
Conclusion: The Era of Punitive Excess, by Jeremy Travis and Bruce Western
Acknowledgments
List of Contributors
Index