When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriages of Justice

When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriages of Justice

2009 • 360 pages

Essays that view wrongful convictions not as random mistakes but as organic outcomes of a misshaped larger system that is rife with faulty eyewitness identifications, false confessions, biased juries, and racial discrimination. Together the contributors reveal the dramatic consequences as well as the daily realities of breakdowns in the law's ability to deliver justice swiftly and fairly, and calls on us to look beyond headline-grabbing exonerations to see how failure is embedded in the legal system itself.

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4 released books

The Charles Hamilton Houston Institute Series on Race and Justice

The Charles Hamilton Houston Institute Series on Race and Justice is a 4-book series first released in 2006 with contributions by Austin Sarat and Ronald Roberts.

From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State: Race and the Death Penalty in America
The Road to Abolition?: The Future of Capital Punishment in the United States
When Law Fails: Making Sense of Miscarriages of Justice
Life without parole America's new death penalty?

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