Blog Feb 3, 2010
Three judges and the California prison system
The recent decision by the three judge panel in the Coleman/Plata case should be applauded as a short but positive step forward in forcing some degree of sanity upon the broken California prison system. Unfortunately, the fact that a panel of Federal judges was forced to step in and force the state to make long overdue policy decisions is simply another poignant reminder of our political systems dysfunctionality. California’s prison crisis is a political construct that an evil scheming mad…
This text identifies the macroeconomic forces relevant to imprisonment — poverty and political powerlessness — and explores viable and humane alternatives to our current incarceration binge.
As every criminology student learns, the “Chicago School” brought us a tradition of research on a variety of topics guided largely by a methodology that looks at patterns of crime as they are related to social ecology. More specifically, this approach looks at how different types of crimes are distributed throughout urban areas. One of the most recent examples comes from a continuing series published by the Los Angeles Times on homicide . The latest in this series focuses on…
Blog Jan 10, 2010
Media Distortions of Youth Crime
I could not help but notice the first of a series of articles appearing in the Cape Cod Times shortly after I arrived for the holidays. The title itself (“Younger and twice as violent ”) conveys a message to the reader that is not uncommon in this day of media hype and distortion. The message seams to be that crime is being committed by people younger than ever before and, even more frightening, the crimes are getting more violent with each passing day. The appearance of this series is no…
Blog Dec 8, 2009
Children of war
I was simply going through my usual morning routine, scanning various media outlets on the Internet, when I checked Bob Herbert’s latest column in the New York Times . I suppose it was the title that prompted me to take a look: ” A Fearful Price .” Herbert started the column by reporting on a conversation he had with a bright young student at Columbia University who “argued that a full-blown counterinsurgency effort, which would likely take many years and cost many lives, was the only way…