The Division of Criminal Justice is proud to announce the release of a new book co-edited by Assistant Professor Danielle Slakoff, Ph.D. This book examines the representation and misrepresentation of ...
A returned package sent from Seattle-based Books to Prisoners to an inmate in Texas. A name and address have been covered for privacy. Two nonprofit prison book programs say the Texas Department of ...
On a summer night in 1971, Michael Henderson, age 18 and black, was hanging out near a nightclub in East St. Louis, Ill., when a car driven by a white boy, with two black passengers, pulled into the ...
Debbie Hines knows a lot about criminal justice—the former trial attorney, Baltimore prosecutor, and Assistant Attorney General for the State of Maryland has had years to hone her experience in this ...
In his new book “Welcome the Wretched,” immigration lawyer César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández makes a case for separating immigration policy from the criminal justice system. The Ohio State University ...
Bill Keller: Prison newspapers have been around for a long time — reportedly since the debtors’ prisons of the 19th century.
Aaron Kupchik is a professor of sociology and criminal Justice at the University of Delaware. His research focuses on the policing and punishment of juveniles in schools, courts and correctional ...
Some children’s intellectual curiosity is born in the science lab or the natural history museum. For state Del. Dana Jones it was reading Judy Blume books she checked out from the Washington Street ...
The US Department of Justice Friday announced the launch of Mexico’s judicial bench book for criminal hearings and trials. This bench book “is designed to increase judicial economy, decrease caseloads ...
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