A System of Pleas: Social Sciences Contributions to the Real Legal System: American Psychology-Law Society Series
Editat de Vanessa A. Edkins, Allison D. Redlichen Limba Engleză Paperback – 25 apr 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190689247
ISBN-10: 0190689242
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria American Psychology-Law Society Series
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190689242
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 231 x 155 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria American Psychology-Law Society Series
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
The Supreme Court has recognized that the American criminal justice system is from beginning to end a system of bargained guilty pleas. The studies presented here provide a comprehensive tour of this system from pretrial detention and the pressures it exerts though the harsh and often undisclosed collateral consequences that follow seemingly beneficial plea agreements. This book examines in depth the decisions of prosecutors, defense attorneys, and defendants (both adults and juveniles), and it documents the sentencing disparities that keep the river of guilty pleas flowing. Once you've read this book, you'll understand what makes our system of criminal justice go.
The plea bargaining process is the silent giant without which the entire criminal justice system would grind to a halt. Yet, despite its immeasurable societal importance, the process has received scant attention from social scientists. This path breaking book remedies that glaring shortfall. The authors provide an insightful and comprehensive account of the process: the goals, incentives and constraints of the actors involved, its effect on racial minorities, juveniles and innocent defendants, and its impact on society at large. For years to come, no scholarly discussion of plea bargaining will be able to ignore this volume.
With over 95% of criminal convictions in the U.S. achieved though guilty pleas, the time has come for social scientists to scrutinize the system, the process, the players, and the outcomes. With timely chapters written by active scholars, this book offers an overview of history and law; an up-to-date look at research on how prosecutors, attorneys and defendants make plea decisions; and the added challenges that confront innocents, juveniles, and minorities. Like it or not, today is the age of the plea bargain - and this book shines a critical spotlight on how it happens.
It has taken decades, but the disciplines of criminology, economics, psychology, criminal justice, and history now give plea bargaining the full attention it deserves. Edkins and Redlich have assembled into this one volume the interconnected insights from these disciplines to explain the plea-centered reality of criminal courts in the United States. If you're new to the work of criminal courts, you need this book. And if you're an experienced traveler in the criminal courts and need a fresh way to see daily business, you need this book.
The plea bargaining process is the silent giant without which the entire criminal justice system would grind to a halt. Yet, despite its immeasurable societal importance, the process has received scant attention from social scientists. This path breaking book remedies that glaring shortfall. The authors provide an insightful and comprehensive account of the process: the goals, incentives and constraints of the actors involved, its effect on racial minorities, juveniles and innocent defendants, and its impact on society at large. For years to come, no scholarly discussion of plea bargaining will be able to ignore this volume.
With over 95% of criminal convictions in the U.S. achieved though guilty pleas, the time has come for social scientists to scrutinize the system, the process, the players, and the outcomes. With timely chapters written by active scholars, this book offers an overview of history and law; an up-to-date look at research on how prosecutors, attorneys and defendants make plea decisions; and the added challenges that confront innocents, juveniles, and minorities. Like it or not, today is the age of the plea bargain - and this book shines a critical spotlight on how it happens.
It has taken decades, but the disciplines of criminology, economics, psychology, criminal justice, and history now give plea bargaining the full attention it deserves. Edkins and Redlich have assembled into this one volume the interconnected insights from these disciplines to explain the plea-centered reality of criminal courts in the United States. If you're new to the work of criminal courts, you need this book. And if you're an experienced traveler in the criminal courts and need a fresh way to see daily business, you need this book.
Notă biografică
Vanessa A. Edkins is an Associate Professor of Psychology at Florida Institute of Technology. Her research has been published in Law and Human Behavior, and Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. Her work has also received coverage in the Wall Street Journal and The Economist.Allison D. Redlich is a Professor of Criminology, Law and Society at George Mason University. The author/editor of five books, she is an internationally recognized expert on confessions and interrogations, guilty pleas, and mental health courts, and publishes extensively in these areas.