|
Product Description
The American criminal justice system contains numerous safeguards to prevent the conviction of innocent persons. The Bill of Rights provides nineteen separate rights for the alleged criminal offender, including the right to effective legal representation and the right to be judged without regard to race or creed. Despite these safeguards, wrongful convictions persist, and the issue has reverberated in the national debate over capital punishment.
The essays in this volume are written from a cross-disciplinary perspective by some of the most eminent lawyers, criminologists, and social scientists in the field today. The articles are divided into four sections: the causes of wrongful convictions, the social characteristics of the wrongly convicted, case studies and personal histories, and suggestions for changes in the criminal justice system to prevent wrongful convictions. Contributors examine a broad range of issues, including the fallibility of eyewitness testimony, particularly in cross-racial identifications; the disadvantages faced by racial and ethnic minorities in the criminal justice system; and the impact of new technologies, especially DNA evidence, in freeing the innocent and bringing the guilty to justice. The book also asks such questions as: What legal characteristics do wrongful convictions share? What are the mechanisms that defendants and their attorneys use to overturn wrongful convictions? The book also provides case studies that offer specific examples of what can and does go wrong in the criminal justice system.
Features
- Used Book in Good Condition
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Anatomy of Innocence: Testimonies of the Wrongfully Convicted
- Constructing Crime: Perspective on Making News And Social Problems
- Media Coverage of Crime and Criminal Justice
- Actual Innocence
- What Do We Deserve?: A Reader on Justice and Desert (Routledge Advances in International)
- Criminal Procedure: Adjudication (Aspen Casebook)
- Picking Cotton: Our Memoir of Injustice and Redemption
- Actual Innocence
- Surviving Justice: America's Wrongfully Convicted and Exonerated (Voice of Witness)
- Criminological Theory: Past to Present: Essential Readings
*If this is not the "Wrongly Convicted: Perspectives on Failed Justice (Critical Issues in Crime and Society)" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 23, 2024 23:33 +08.