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Book Cover
E-book
Author Bach, Wendy A., author.

Title Prosecuting poverty, criminalizing care / Wendy A. Bach, University of Tennessee College of Law
Published Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2022
©2022

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 224 pages) : illustrations
Contents Creating a crime to create care -- Framing and reframing -- Laying the ground -- Punishing poverty -- Deepening poverty and degrading justice -- The path in : from healthcare to child welfare to criminal systems -- Criminalization as a road to care and the price you pay -- Corrupting care -- A path forward
Summary "First the structure of this particular law: Technically speaking, the legislature created this crime, not by creating an entirely new crime but by enacting a law clarifying an existing criminal statute. This is how it worked: Like every other state, Tennessee makes assault a crime. It is an misdemeanor, which means that if you violate the statute, you can be incarcerated for no more than eleven months and twenty-nine days. Assault is defined, in Tennessee, as "[i]ntentionally, knowingly or recklessly caus[ing] bodily injury to another . . . ." You will notice, when you read this, that this particular language says nothing about pregnancy or a fetus. For prosecutors who might want a to charge a woman with assault because of her drug use during pregnancy, the absence of specific language about pregnancy or the fetus in the statute could cause legal problems. She could argue, in that case, that taking drugs while pregnant is not what the legislators meant by assault. Despite this possible legal problem, across the nation, and in Tennessee, women have been prosecuted for drug use during pregnancy for violating statutes all of which were not initially designed to criminalize this particular conduct. For example, women have been charged with assault, chemical endangerment of a minor, or child abuse, and the prosecutors in those cases have argued that in-utero drug exposure was included in the definitions of those crimes. But in many states, these charges led to legal disputes. The disputes in these cases often came down to the question of whether or not in-utero drug exposure was the kind of conduct that the legislature intended to make criminal when they wrote the law"-- Provided by publisher
Analysis Fetal assault
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on August 31, 2022)
Subject Substance abuse in pregnancy -- Law and legislation -- Tennessee -- Criminal provisions
Pregnant women -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Tennessee
Fetus -- Legal status, laws, etc. -- Tennessee
Fetus -- Legal status, laws, etc.
Pregnant women -- Legal status, laws, etc.
Tennessee
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2021060072
ISBN 9781108693783
1108693784