NCJ Number
157112
Editor(s)
G F Cole
Date Published
1993
Length
526 pages
Annotation
The articles in this criminal justice textbook are arranged to reflect the theme that criminal justice can be understood as a relationship between law and politics that operates within the context of an administrative system.
Abstract
The first section, dealing with the administration of justice, contains articles discussing models of the criminal process, the politicization of street crime, and a theory of street-level bureaucracy as a component of the criminal justice system. The following sections each deal with an actor in the criminal justice system: the police, prosecutors, defense attorneys, courts, and the correctional system. Some of the specific issues examined by the contributing authors include police use of deadly force, plea bargaining, defense attorney perspectives on their relations with criminal clients, the effect of race on sentencing, and the use of intermediate sanctions. The chapters in the final section present a conservative and a liberal perspective on crime control and criminal justice policies. Chapter references