A classic study in law and society is now readily available to scholars, researchers, and others in the field of criminal justice, due process, policing, and administrative procedure. It adds a new Preface by the author and a new Foreword by Berkeley law professor Malcolm M. Feeley. As the author reflects:
In his new Foreword, Feeley describes the book as “a brilliant analysis of the criminal process” and explains why its relevance and theoretical power have increased over time. In a nation where legal rights and process became enhanced in criminal courts and formal processes of adjudication, Greenspan showed the bypassing of much of this framework by the substitution of parole revocation, probation, and the like—by what Feeley summarizes as “the triumph of the administrative model. Her thesis shows how this occurred. The backlash to the Warren Court’s criminal due process revolutions was not a wholesale abandonment of rights, but an embrace of a lower standard of due process, administrative due process.” Some of these changes are well known, of course, but “Greenspan’s study is brilliant precisely because it problematizes these developments. It identifies the central issue, how thinking about the criminal process has been so fundamentally yet unwittingly transformed.”
This book is a powerful look at these reforms and transformations, presented in the Classic Dissertation Series by Quid Pro Books.
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ROSANN GREENSPAN has served as the Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Law and Society at the University of California, Berkeley, since 2005. Before that, she was Associate Director and Acting Assistant Director. She has also taught in Berkeley’s Legal Studies Program. She earned a B.A. magna cum laude from Yale College, an M.A. from the Centre of Criminology at the University of Toronto, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Berkeley’s Jurisprudence & Social Policy Program. She was the Postdoctoral Fellow in Law and Politics at Stanford and a U.S. Supreme Court Fellow, as well as Research Director of the Police Foundation in Washington, DC. She is Co-editor of the section on law of the International Encyclopedia of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 2d Ed. (fthcg. 2014), and received the 2014 Western Society of Criminology Fellows Award for important contributions in criminology.
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