
The United States Incarcerates Far More People Than Any Other Country In The World, At Rates Nearly Ten Times Higher Than Other Liberal Democracies. Indeed, While The U.s. Is Home To 5 Percent Of The World's Population, It Contains Nearly 25 Percent Of Its Prisoners. But The Extent Of American Cruelty Goes Beyond Simply Locking People Up. At Every Stage Of The Criminal Justice Process - Plea Bargaining, Sentencing, Prison Conditions, Rehabilitation, Parole, And Societal Reentry - The U.s. Is Harsher And More Punitive Than Other Comparable Countries. In Unusually Cruel, Marc Morjé Howard Argues That The American Criminal Justice And Prison Systems Are Exceptional - In A Truly Shameful Way. Although Other Scholars Have Focused On The Internal Dynamics That Have Produced This Massive Carceral System, Howard Provides The First Sustained Comparative Analysis That Shows Just How Far The U.s. Lies Outside The Norm Of Established Democracies. And, By Highlighting How Other Countries Successfully Apply Less Punitive And More Productive Policies, He Provides Plausible Solutions To Addressing America's Criminal Justice Quagmire.
This book investigates why the United States maintains a carceral system that is significantly more punitive and expansive than those of other comparable liberal democracies. Marc Morjé Howard, a professor of government and law, utilizes a comparative political science framework to analyze the American criminal justice system against international norms. By contrasting U.S. policies with those of other nations, he argues that American exceptionalism in this context manifests as a uniquely harsh and counterproductive approach to punishment and rehabilitation.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars in the field of criminal justice frequently cite this work as a foundational comparative study that effectively contextualizes American policy within a global framework. Readers often note the clarity of the prose, which makes complex legal and political data accessible to a broad audience interested in systemic reform.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190659351
ISBN-13:
9780190659356
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