University of California Hastings College of the Law (CA)
criminal law, criminal justice, criminal law constitutional law, criminal procedure, racial disparities in criminal justice, 4th amendment and technologypublic policy and criminal justice reform, prison abolition, carceral state, police and policing, prisons, prison reform
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About Me
Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment (HJCP) is a forum in which meaningful discussion can occur on issues of criminal law, incarceration and the criminal justice system. Our intention is to establish a cross-disciplinary platform in which scholars and practitioners analyze criminal law and procedure as well as the different institutions of incarceration. From the pervasiveness of racial profiling to the shackles of collateral consequences, the criminal system disparately impacts the poor and people of color. A thorough examination of the various ways in which individuals are impacted by the criminal system is only possible with a diversity of perspectives. Therefore, we warmly invite the written analysis of those who traditionally have been excluded from legal scholarship, including incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people, as well as others who have been most affected by the criminal justice system. Ultimately, we believe that through the exploration of criminal law and its greater context in American society, HJCP can contribute to a critical discourse on punishment, justice and human dignity.
Publications
- Hadar Aviram, “Are We Still Cheap on Crime? Austerity, Punitivism, and Common Sense in the Trump/Sessions/Barr Era,” Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment, Winter 2019.
- Austin Sarat, Charlotte Blackman, Elinor Scout Boynton, Katherine Chen, Theodore Perez, “After Abolition: Acquiescence, Backlash, and the Consequences of Ending the Death Penalty,” Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment, Winter 2019.
- Ethan Silverstein, “Life, Liberty, and Rental Property: Oakland’s Nuisance Eviction Program,” Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment, Winter 2019.
- Belle Yan, “Prosecuting Members of Defense Legal Teams and Its Ethical Implications for the Prosecutor: A Proposal for a New Ethical Standard,” Hastings Journal of Crime and Punishment, Winter 2019.
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