Vol. 100 No. 3, June 2010
Index
- Opening remarks.
- Capital punishment: a century of discontinuous debate.
- A short history of American sentencing: too little law, too much law, or just right.
- The modern irrationalities of American criminal codes: an empirical study of offense grading.
- How much do we really know about criminal deterrence?
- One hundred years later: wrongful convictions after a century of research.
- Efficiency and cost: the impact of videoconferenced hearings on bail decisions.
- Racial and ethnic disparity and criminal justice: how much is too much?
- The Supreme Court giveth and the Supreme Court taketh away: the century of Fourth Amendment "search and seizure" doctrine.
- One hundred years of race and crime.
- "Offending women": a double entendre.
- Damaged daughters: the history of girls' sexuality and the juvenile justice system.
- Bill Clinton's parting pardon party.
- The twilight of the pardon power.
- Reflections and perspectives on reentry and collateral consequences.
- The scale of imprisonment in the United States: twentieth century patterns and twenty-first century prospects.
- Remarks at the dinner celebrating the centennial of the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology: January 29, 2010.