The Crisis in America's Criminal Courts
Improving Criminal Justice Outcomes by Transforming Decision-Making
Zusammenfassung
The Crisis in America’s Criminal Courts highlights a variety of problems that judges, prosecutors, and public defenders face within a criminal justice system that is ineffective, unfair, and extraordinarily expensive. While many argue, and author, William R. Kelly, agrees, that crushing caseloads and court dockets certainly qualify as a crisis, Kelly suggests there is a much greater crisis in the courts that results in profound downstream effects on criminal justice performance and outcomes. It sounds simple, but the greatest risk faced by the justice system is the lack of time, expertise, and resources for effective decision-making. In this book, Kelly proposes a variety of evidence-based reforms that, as a start, provide the key decision-makers with professional clinical experts to accurately assess and advice regarding mitigating the circumstances that bring individuals into the courts.
We must rebalance. We need incarceration for those who are too dangerous or violent or who are habitual offenders. For most of the rest, we need to manage risk, but very importantly, it is time to get serious about behavioral change.
We need to change the culture of the courthouse and reorient how we think about crime and punishment.
Schlagworte
Decision-Making recidivism adversarial system American criminal courts progressive prosecutors mental illness diversion to treatment bail reform holistic defense criminal courts criminal justice reform criminal justice responseKeywords
criminal justice- i–viii Preface i–viii
- 1–30 Introduction 1–30
- 135–158 Ch05. Indigent Defense 135–158
- 189–212 References 189–212
- 213–222 Index 213–222
- 223–224 About the Author 223–224