Can anyone recommend a law review or other article that puts the U.S. crim pro "rights revolution" in enlightening historical perspective? #CJReform
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Replying to @_gabriel_U @ChaseMadar
I'm unfortunately not well-versed enough to recommend literature. I follow these folks (as you may):
@prisonculture@DavidpStein@dnbrgr@jduffyrice@TochiTrueStory@mathuclair@nikhil_palsingh. Perhaps they have recs!1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @RaulACarrillo @_gabriel_U and
This is the question for
@saramayeux, whose work speaks to this, as does Risa Goluboff's book Vagrant Nation (she might have a law review article on the topic, but I've only read the book.)https://as.vanderbilt.edu/history/bio/sara-mayeux …1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @DavidpStein @RaulACarrillo and
The Goluboff is on my radar! Any tips from
@saramayeux v welcome! And thanks!1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes
Specifically, any good rebuttals to the Stuntz argument that the crimpro "Rights Revolution" led, inadvertently and perversely, to the current regime of plea-deals, mandatory minimums and mass incarceration?
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