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Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration: Essays on Criminal Justice Innovation
Paperback

Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration: Essays on Criminal Justice Innovation

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A new collection of compelling and challenging essays from one of the nation’s leading voices on criminal justice reform, Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration makes the argument that sometimes small changes on the ground can add up to big improvements in the criminal justice system.

How do you launch a new criminal justice reform? How do you measure impact? Is it possible to spread new practices to resistant audiences? And what’s the point of small-bore experimentation anyway? Greg Berman answers these questions by telling the story of successful experiments like the Red Hook Community Justice Center in Brooklyn and by detailing the challenges of implementing new ideas within the criminal justice system. As Laurie Robinson, a professor at George Mason University, writes in her introduction: Berman offers vivid testimony that-even in the face of opposition-it is, in fact, possible to push our criminal justice system closer to realizing its highest ideals. And that, indeed, is good news. Other experts share their opinions:

The central insight of Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration is that small tweaks in practice within the criminal justice system can sometimes lead to big change on the streets. By telling the story of the Red Hook Community Justice Center and similar innovations, Greg Berman offers a hopeful message: criminal justice reform at the local level can make a difference.

  • James B. Jacobs
    Warren E. Burger Professor of Law
    New York University School of Law

Innovation is hard work. In Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration, Berman offers a look at how change happens at the local level-and how, sometimes, it doesn’t. These well-written essays offer a compelling vision of both the challenges and opportunities of criminal justice reform.

  • Nicholas Turner
    President, Vera Institute of Justice

The topic of criminal justice reform has challenged and bedeviled social thinkers for centuries. In this book, Berman offers a clear-eyed and inventive approach to the problem. Recognizing that change is best achieved at the local level with small, incremental steps using demonstration projects, Berman provides concrete examples of both successes and failures stemming from the work of the Center for Court Innovation over the last two decades. For anyone interested in the future of criminal justice, this book should be on the top of the ‘must read’ list.

  • John H. Laub
    Distinguished University Professor, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice
    University of Maryland, College Park

Here you will find Berman’s compelling case for community justice, along with classic readings on problem-solving courts. Berman writes like all the rest of us wish we did….

  • Candace McCoy
    The Graduate Center and John Jay College
    City University of New York
Read More
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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Quid Pro LLC
Date
27 December 2013
Pages
182
ISBN
9781610272117

A new collection of compelling and challenging essays from one of the nation’s leading voices on criminal justice reform, Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration makes the argument that sometimes small changes on the ground can add up to big improvements in the criminal justice system.

How do you launch a new criminal justice reform? How do you measure impact? Is it possible to spread new practices to resistant audiences? And what’s the point of small-bore experimentation anyway? Greg Berman answers these questions by telling the story of successful experiments like the Red Hook Community Justice Center in Brooklyn and by detailing the challenges of implementing new ideas within the criminal justice system. As Laurie Robinson, a professor at George Mason University, writes in her introduction: Berman offers vivid testimony that-even in the face of opposition-it is, in fact, possible to push our criminal justice system closer to realizing its highest ideals. And that, indeed, is good news. Other experts share their opinions:

The central insight of Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration is that small tweaks in practice within the criminal justice system can sometimes lead to big change on the streets. By telling the story of the Red Hook Community Justice Center and similar innovations, Greg Berman offers a hopeful message: criminal justice reform at the local level can make a difference.

  • James B. Jacobs
    Warren E. Burger Professor of Law
    New York University School of Law

Innovation is hard work. In Reducing Crime, Reducing Incarceration, Berman offers a look at how change happens at the local level-and how, sometimes, it doesn’t. These well-written essays offer a compelling vision of both the challenges and opportunities of criminal justice reform.

  • Nicholas Turner
    President, Vera Institute of Justice

The topic of criminal justice reform has challenged and bedeviled social thinkers for centuries. In this book, Berman offers a clear-eyed and inventive approach to the problem. Recognizing that change is best achieved at the local level with small, incremental steps using demonstration projects, Berman provides concrete examples of both successes and failures stemming from the work of the Center for Court Innovation over the last two decades. For anyone interested in the future of criminal justice, this book should be on the top of the ‘must read’ list.

  • John H. Laub
    Distinguished University Professor, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice
    University of Maryland, College Park

Here you will find Berman’s compelling case for community justice, along with classic readings on problem-solving courts. Berman writes like all the rest of us wish we did….

  • Candace McCoy
    The Graduate Center and John Jay College
    City University of New York
Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Quid Pro LLC
Date
27 December 2013
Pages
182
ISBN
9781610272117