The Future of Crime and Punishment
Smart Policies for Reducing Crime and Saving Money
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- 20,99 €
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- 20,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Today, we know that crime is often not just a matter of making bad decisions. Rather, there are a variety of factors that are implicated in much criminal offending, some fairly obvious like poverty, mental illness, and drug abuse and others less so, such as neurocognitive problems. Today, we have the tools for effective criminal behavioral change, but this cannot be an excuse for criminal offending. In The Future of Crime and Punishment, William R. Kelly identifies the need to educate the public on how these tools can be used to most effectively and cost efficiently reduce crime, recidivism, victimization and cost.
The justice system of the future needs to be much more collaborative, utilizing the expertise of a variety of disciplines such as psychology, psychiatry, addiction, and neuroscience. Judges and prosecutors are lawyers, not clinicians, and as we transition the justice system to a focus on behavioral change, the decision making will need to reflect the input of clinical experts. The path forward is one characterized largely by change from traditional criminal prosecution and punishment to venues that balance accountability, compliance, and risk management with behavioral change interventions that address the primary underlying causes for recidivism.
There are many moving parts to this effort and it is a complex proposition. It requires substantial changes to law, procedure, decision making, roles and responsibilities, expertise, and funding. Moreover, it requires a radical shift in how we think about crime and punishment. Our thinking needs to reflect a perspective that crime is harmful, but that much criminal behavior is changeable.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sociology professor Kelly (Criminal Justice at the Crossroads: Transforming Crime and Punishment) provides a well-reasoned, if familiar, critique of the American criminal justice system, along with thoughtful prescriptions for revolutionary reform. Despite the trillions the U.S. has spent over the last four decades on criminal justice and the war on drugs, crime has not been significantly reduced. For Kelly, that failure is inextricably linked with the system's focus on punishment, which often includes incarceration, as a response to criminal behavior. Such policies ignore many reasons for criminality, including substance abuse, mental illness, and poor education, and Kelly is persuasive in describing how "behavior change interventions... can reduce crime, recidivism, victimization, and cost." His balanced approach, which includes an understanding of the historical and societal forces that led to the Nixon-era War on Crime and its successor approaches, offers much food for thought. But despite his warning of the consequences of a failure for true reform, he is aware that realistically its prospects are uncertain, and he ultimately hangs his hopes on analyses that show that such changes could "save tremendous amounts of tax dollars" rather than humanitarian pleas. This is an accessible introduction to the subject for newcomers; others may find it mostly retreads well-covered ground.