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Mass Incarceration on Trial: A Remarkable Court Decision and the Future of Prisons America

Mass Incarceration on Trial: A Remarkable Court Decision and the Future of Prisons America

Current price: $18.99
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Mass Incarceration on Trial: A Remarkable Court Decision and the Future of Prisons America

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Mass Incarceration on Trial: A Remarkable Court Decision and the Future of Prisons America

Current price: $18.99
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Size: Paperback

CartBuy Online
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In this “impassioned plea for human dignity” (
Kirkus Reviews
) Jonathan Simon—called “one of the outstanding criminologists of his generation” by Nikolas Rose of the London School of Economics—charts a surprising path to end mass incarceration in America. Using the landmark Supreme Court ruling in
Brown v. Plata
on overcrowding in California prisons as his starting point, Simon suggests that incarcerating people on a “mass” scale simply cannot be accomplished in comportment with the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment.
In an argument that the
Los Angeles Review of Books
calls “unique,” Simon contends that because we cannot offer meaningful health care, mental health care, or safe and reasonable prison conditions when prisons are run at many times their maximum capacity, “mass incarceration is fundamentally incompatible with humane treatment.”
Todd Clear, former dean of Rutgers School of Criminal Justice, calls
Mass Incarceration on Trial
“highly readable, stunning,”
Slate
says the book “could mark the beginning of a new era in American jurisprudence,” and David Cole in the
New York Review of Books
calls Simon's work a “sign of the new optimism about criminal justice reform.”
In this “impassioned plea for human dignity” (
Kirkus Reviews
) Jonathan Simon—called “one of the outstanding criminologists of his generation” by Nikolas Rose of the London School of Economics—charts a surprising path to end mass incarceration in America. Using the landmark Supreme Court ruling in
Brown v. Plata
on overcrowding in California prisons as his starting point, Simon suggests that incarcerating people on a “mass” scale simply cannot be accomplished in comportment with the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment.
In an argument that the
Los Angeles Review of Books
calls “unique,” Simon contends that because we cannot offer meaningful health care, mental health care, or safe and reasonable prison conditions when prisons are run at many times their maximum capacity, “mass incarceration is fundamentally incompatible with humane treatment.”
Todd Clear, former dean of Rutgers School of Criminal Justice, calls
Mass Incarceration on Trial
“highly readable, stunning,”
Slate
says the book “could mark the beginning of a new era in American jurisprudence,” and David Cole in the
New York Review of Books
calls Simon's work a “sign of the new optimism about criminal justice reform.”

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