Setting the stage, meeting the players -- The seventies synthesis -- The equivocal assaul on discretion, 1980-1995 -- The quest for improved community corrections, 1980-1997 -- The demise of parole, 1994-2002 -- Managerialism's modest comeback, the early 2000s -- Wisconsin's war on drugs -- Lessons
Summary
The dramatic increase in U.S. prison populations since the 1970s is often blamed on the mandatory sentencing required by ""three strikes"" laws and other punitive crime bills. Michael O'Hear shows that the blame is actually not so easily assigned. His meticulous analysis of incarceration in Wisconsin-a state where judges have considerable discretion in sentencing-explores the reasons why the prison population has ballooned nearly tenfold over the past forty years. O'Hear tracks the effects of sentencing laws and politics in Wisconsin from the eve of the imprisonment boom in 1970 up to the 2010s
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on March 15, 2017)