Big Capital & the Carceral State
In: Hastings Law Journal, 2024 Forthcoming
16 Ergebnisse
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In: Hastings Law Journal, 2024 Forthcoming
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In: 67 Loyola Law Review 101 (2021)
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In: Wisconsin Law Review, Band 2022, Heft 3
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In: Harvard Civil Rights- Civil Liberties Law Review (CR-CL), Band 55, Heft 1
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In: 80 Ohio St. L. J. 841 (2019)
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In: Duke Law Journal, Forthcoming
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Many of our criminal justice woes can be traced to the loss of the community's decisionmaking ability in adjudicating crime and punishment. American normative theories of democracy and democratic deliberation have always included the participation of the community as part of our system of criminal justice. This type of democratic localism is essential for the proper functioning of the criminal system because the criminal justice principles embodying substantive constitutional norms can only be defined through community interactions at the local level. Accordingly, returning the community to its proper role in deciding punishment for wrongdoers would both improve criminal process and return us to fundamental criminal justice ideals.
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In: Utah Law Review, Forthcoming
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In: Northwestern University Law Review, Band 111, Heft 6
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In: Boston College Law Review, Band 57, Heft 2016
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In: Defending the Jury: Crime, Community, and the Constitution, Cambridge University Press (April 2015)
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In: Harvard Law Review Forum, Band 128, S. 91
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In: Indiana Law Journal, Band 84, S. 397
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Working paper
In: Northwestern University Law Review, Band 111, Heft 6
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