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Full-Text Articles in Law
The Perverse Effects Of Efficiency In Criminal Process, Darryl K. Brown
The Perverse Effects Of Efficiency In Criminal Process, Darryl K. Brown
Darryl K. Brown
The need for greater efficiency in legal process is an undisputed premise of modern policy, and efficiency’s virtues hardly merit debate, notably by the U.S. Supreme Court. A central part of the story of modern adjudication is the steady gains in case processing efficiency. This, above all else, explains the “vanishing trial” and its replacement by civil settlement and, in criminal courts, by plea bar-gaining.
Defining efficiency in any context, however, is a more complicated endeavor than courts, policymakers, and many commentators commonly acknowledge. It requires first defining ends and means, and even whether a given practice is an end …
Penal Modernism In Theory And Practice, Darryl K. Brown
Penal Modernism In Theory And Practice, Darryl K. Brown
Darryl K. Brown
This comment on James Whitman's article, "The Case for Penal Modernism: Beyond Utility and Desert," suggests additional reasons why the era of penal modernism was eventually elipsed by retributivism in the U.S., and questions the degree to which penal modernism's fall also represents retributivism's triumph.
Public Welfare Offenses, Darryl K. Brown
Public Welfare Offenses, Darryl K. Brown
Darryl K. Brown
This chapter provides an overview, historical account and critical analysis of Anglo-American public welfare offenses, meaning strict liability crimes generally employed for regulatory purposes. As an explanation for the greater prevalence of these strict liability regulatory crimes in England and the U.S. compared to other jurisdictions, the chapter points to, among other factors, the evolving scope of social duties in modernity and traditional Anglo-American limits on central state administrative capacity.