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May 11, 2019
New issue of Crime and Justice covers "American Sentencing — What Happens and Why?"
I just received an email reporting that the latest issue of Crime and Justice is in print, and all sentencing fans will want to get access to this volume. This issue has 10(!) amazing articles put together by editor Michael Tonry around the topic of "American Sentencing — What Happens and Why?." Here is the list of titles and authors (and clicking through here enables seeing abstracts for each):
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"Fifty Years of American Sentencing Reform: Nine Lessons" by Michael Tonry
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"The Wild West of Sentencing Reform: Lessons from California" by Robert Weisberg
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"Forty Years of American Sentencing Guidelines: What Have We Learned?" by Richard S. Frase
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"Federal Sentencing after Booker" by Paul J. Hofer
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"The Evolution of Sentencing Guidelines in Minnesota and England and Wales" by Julian V. Roberts
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"Model Penal Code: Sentencing — Workable Limits on Mass Punishment" by Kevin R. Reitz and Cecelia M. Klingele
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"Trials and Tribulations: The Trial Tax and the Process of Punishment" by Brian D. Johnson
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"Have Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Sentencing Declined?" by Ryan D. King and Michael T. Light
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"Predictions of Dangerousness in Sentencing: Déjà Vu All Over Again" by Michael Tonry
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"Criminal Courts as Inhabited Institutions: Making Sense of Difference and Similarity in Sentencing" by Jeffery T. Ulmer
May 11, 2019 at 01:00 PM | Permalink