Wisconsin Sentencing in the Tough-on-Crime Era
«Serious students of modern sentencing reforms-as well as everyone eager to understand the roots of, and potential responses to, modern mass incarceration-must have this book on their reading list. O'Hear thoroughly canvasses the dynamic story of Wisconsin's uniquely important sentencing reform history." - Douglas Berman, author of the Sentencing Law and Policy Blog
"Fascinating political and social history. O'Hear puts national criminal justice trends into a single-state frame, providing much sharper insights than often come from trying to look at the entirety of this very big country. This is first-rate work." - Frank O. Bowman III, University of Missouri School of Law
"Highly recommended to judges, academics, students, or anyone interested in learning more about effective sentencing reform." - New York Journal of Books
"Eye-opening." - Shepherd Express
"Debunks myths surrounding mass incarceration." - Isthmus
"O'Hear's carefully qualified and explicitly contingent hypothesis enjoys robust support in highly qualified scholarship and in empirical data." - Wisconsin Lawyer»
The dramatic increase in U.S. prison populations since the 1970s is often blamed on the mandatory sentencing required by "three strikes" laws and other punitive crime bills. Michael O'Hear shows that the blame is actually not so easily assigned. Les mer
O'Hear tracks the effects of sentencing laws and politics in Wisconsin from the eve of the imprisonment boom in 1970 up to the 2010s. Drawing on archival research, original public-opinion polling, and interviews with dozens of key policymakers, he reveals important dimensions that have been missed by others. He draws out lessons from the Wisconsin experience for the United States as a whole, where mass incarceration has cost taxpayers billions of dollars and caused untold misery to millions of inmates and their families.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- University of Wisconsin Press
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780299310240
- Utgivelsesår
- 2021
- Format
- 23 x 15 cm
Anmeldelser
«Serious students of modern sentencing reforms-as well as everyone eager to understand the roots of, and potential responses to, modern mass incarceration-must have this book on their reading list. O'Hear thoroughly canvasses the dynamic story of Wisconsin's uniquely important sentencing reform history." - Douglas Berman, author of the Sentencing Law and Policy Blog
"Fascinating political and social history. O'Hear puts national criminal justice trends into a single-state frame, providing much sharper insights than often come from trying to look at the entirety of this very big country. This is first-rate work." - Frank O. Bowman III, University of Missouri School of Law
"Highly recommended to judges, academics, students, or anyone interested in learning more about effective sentencing reform." - New York Journal of Books
"Eye-opening." - Shepherd Express
"Debunks myths surrounding mass incarceration." - Isthmus
"O'Hear's carefully qualified and explicitly contingent hypothesis enjoys robust support in highly qualified scholarship and in empirical data." - Wisconsin Lawyer»