When Janet Garcia-Hallett, Ph.D., was growing up in Harlem, she noticed the impact that incarceration had on communities of color, much like her own. Drawn to the field of criminal justice, she also ...
A returned package sent from Seattle-based Books to Prisoners to an inmate in Texas. A name and address have been covered for privacy. Two nonprofit prison book programs say the Texas Department of ...
Debbie Hines knows a lot about criminal justice—the former trial attorney, Baltimore prosecutor, and Assistant Attorney General for the State of Maryland has had years to hone her experience in this ...
When it got ugly—in the streets, the parks and the subways—and New Yorkers had nowhere left to turn, they elected Mayor Rudy Giuliani. He turned to the Manhattan Institute, whose “broken windows” ...
A photo of Brock Turner, the Stanford swimmer given what many view as a light sentence for sexual assault in 2016, now appears next to the definition of “rape” in a college criminal justice textbook.
Two recent books about Honduras tackle an age-old question: At what point does the quest for justice cross ethical and possibly even legal lines and become villainous itself? Neither book offers a ...
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