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Jury Trials and Plea Bargaining: A True History

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Jury Trials and Plea Bargaining: A True History

Contributors:

By (Author) Chester L Mirsky
By (author) Mike McConville

ISBN:

9781841135168

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Hart Publishing

Publication Date:

31st March 2005

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Legal systems: courts and procedures

Dewey:

345.7307209034

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

392

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm

Description

This book is a study of the social transformation of criminal justice, its institutions, its method of case disposition and the source of its legitimacy. Focused upon the apprehension, investigation and adjudication of indicted cases in New York City's main trial tribunal in the nineteenth century - the Court of General Sessions - it traces the historical underpinnings of a lawyering culture which, in the first half of the nineteenth century, celebrated trial by jury as the fairest and most reliable method of case disposition and then at the middle of the century dramatically gave birth to plea bargaining, which thereafter became the dominant method of case disposition in the United States. The book demonstrates that the nature of criminal prosecutions in everyday indicted cases was transformed, from disputes between private parties resolved through a public determination of the facts and law to a private determination of the issues between the state and the individual, marked by greater police involvement in the processing of defendants and public prosecutorial discretion. As this occurred, the structural purpose of criminal courts changed - from individual to aggregate justice - as did the method and manner of their dispositions - from trials to guilty pleas. Contemporaneously, a new criminology emerged, with its origins in European jurisprudence, which was to transform the way in which crime was viewed as a social and political problem. The book, therefore, sheds light on the relationship of the method of case disposition to the means of securing social control of an underclass, in the context of the legitimation of a new social order in which the local state sought to define groups of people as well as actual offending in criminogenic terms.

Reviews

"A fascinating account which traces the origins of plea-bargaining in the politicisation of criminal justice, linking developments in day-to-day practices of the criminal process with macro-changes in political economy, notably the structures of local governance. This is a classic socio-legal study and should be read by anyone interested in criminology, criminal justice, modern history or social theory". Nicola Lacey, Professor of Criminal Law and Legal Theory, London School of Economics."

Author Bio

Mike McConville is Professor of Law at the University of Warwick. Chester L. Mirsky is an Emeritus Professor of Law at New York University.

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