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Policing, Masculinities, And Judicial Acknowledgment, Nicholas J. Prendergast
Policing, Masculinities, And Judicial Acknowledgment, Nicholas J. Prendergast
Vanderbilt Law Review
In the 1980s, the Supreme Court held that courts must consider the “totality of the circumstances” when deciding the reasonableness of a police officer’s conduct in an excessive force suit. To this day, the precise meaning of “reasonableness” remains elusive. For years, courts around the country have struggled to articulate what police conduct should and—equally as saliently— should not be considered during reasonableness determinations. Thus far, the Supreme Court has been unwilling to substantively clarify its reasonableness doctrine. This lack of clarity has led to an untenable patchwork of differing legal frameworks throughout the United States.
This issue exists in …
Liability Of State Officials And Prison Corporations For Excessive Use Of Force Against Inmates Of Private Prisons, Donna S. Spurlock
Liability Of State Officials And Prison Corporations For Excessive Use Of Force Against Inmates Of Private Prisons, Donna S. Spurlock
Vanderbilt Law Review
Privatization of correctional institutions has emerged in response to the growing problem of prison overcrowding and the increasing cost of providing correctional services. Although it offers solutions to pressing social and financial problems, privatization raises two significant legal questions. First, how much force may a prison guard, hired by a private corrections corporation, use against a prisoner; and second, who will be liable when that guard uses excessive force?
This Note analyzes the issues surrounding the liability of both state and private corrections corporations for the excessive use of force by private prison guards. Part II examines the imposition of …