In The Framework of Criminal Justice, originally published in 1981,
the criminal justice process is analysed by using six models, each of
which expresses a different justification for criminal justice and
punishment: the due process model – exacting justice between equal
parties; the crime control model – punishing wrong and preventing
further crime; the bureaucratic model – controlling crime and
criminals; the medical model – rehabilitating offenders; the status
passage model – publicly denouncing the crime and criminal; and the
power model – maintaining domination by the ruling class and
reinforcing class values. The study examines the formal rules and
procedures of the magistrate court system within the context of these
models and also discusses the roles of the actors (police, defendant,
magistrate, court clerks, and lawyers). Next, the study depicts eight
scenes that occur from the defendant's arrest through a court hearing
to sentencing. It assesses how closely the activity and behaviour
within the system follow the formal protections granted by the British
system of justice, and it concludes that the process is far more
complex and the rules far more open to interpretation than is commonly
believed. The book suggests that this miscalculation has led to the
failure of various reforms – special attention is given to the Bail
Reform Act of 1976 and two sections of the Criminal Law Act of 1977.
It further suggests that real reform must depend upon an understanding
of the political nature of the criminal justice system.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000854510
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter