Description
About the Author
Darryl K. Brown is the O. M. Vicars Professor of Law at the University of Virginia, and the E. James Kelly, Jr. Class of 1965 Research Professor of Law. He specializes in criminal law, criminal adjudication, and evidence. Previously, he was the Class of 1958 Alumni Professor of Law at Washington and Lee University School of Law. Professor Brown clerked for Chief Judge Dolores K. Sloviter of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. He was also an associate at Kilpatrick & Cody in Atlanta, and an assistant public defender in Clarke County, Georgia.
Reviews
"Free Market Criminal Justice is a major advance on past work that has tried to link US punitiveness to its political economy. Recognizing that both democracy and markets operate as regulative ideals in American government, Brown shows us how they combine to produce a criminal process dominated by private ordering and remarkably indifferent to either law or truth. Essential to understanding why our system is both excessive and inadequate. It is hard to see how we can escape mass incarceration without revisiting these constitutive political choices." -Jonathan Simon, Adrian A. Kragen Professor of Law, Faculty Director, Center for the Study of Law & Society, UC Berkeley School of Law "Darryl Brown presents an original and convincing diagnosis of the distinctively American ideologies that have produced catastrophic dysfunction in our criminal justice system. His insightful and cogently argued book will prompt fresh thinking among all who are seeking a way out of our addictive reliance on "efficient" procedure and grossly excessive punishment as the solution to every social ill." -Stephen J. Schulhofer, Robert B. McKay Professor of Law, New York University School of Law
Book Information
ISBN 9780190457877
Author Darryl K. Brown
Format Hardback
Page Count 322
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 590g
Dimensions(mm) 236mm * 163mm * 28mm