It is a truism that the administration of criminal justice consists of a series of discretionary decisions by police, prosecutors, judges, and other officials. Taming the System is a history of the forty-year effort to control the discretion. It examines the discretion problem from the initial ''discovery'' of the phenomenon by the American Bar Foundation in the 1950s through to the most recent evaluation research on reform measures. Of enormous value to scholars, reformers, and criminal justice professionals, this book approaches the discretion problem through a detailed examination of four decision points: policing, bail setting, plea bargaining, and sentencing. In a field which largely produces short-ranged ''evaluation research,'' this study, in taking a wider approach, distinguishes between the role of administrative bodies (the police) and evaluates the longer-term trends and the successful reforms in criminal justice history.
Author(s): Samuel Walker
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 1993
Language: English
Pages: 208
Contents......Page 10
1. Discretion and Its Discontents......Page 14
2. Police Discretion......Page 32
3. The Two Bail Reform Movements......Page 65
4. The Plea-Bargaining Problem......Page 92
5. Sentencing Reform......Page 123
6. A System Tamed? An Interim Report on the Control of Discretion......Page 156
Notes......Page 168
B......Page 196
D......Page 197
G......Page 198
M......Page 199
P......Page 200
S......Page 201
W......Page 202