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John Paul Stevens: Defender of Rights in Criminal Justice – PDF

eBook details

  • Author: Christopher E. Smith
  • File Size: 2 MB
  • Format: PDF
  • Length: 300 Pages
  • Publisher: Lexington Books; Reprint edition
  • Publication Date: October 22, 2015
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0148Z5VQK
  • ISBN-10: 1498523757, 1498523730, 1498523749
  • ISBN-13: 9781498523752, 9781498523738, 9781498523745

Original price was: $37.29.Current price is: $6.00.

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About The Author

Christopher E. Smith

Christopher E. Smith

Dr. Christopher E. Smith is a Professor of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University (MSU). He earned degrees at the University of Bristol (England), the University of Tennessee, Harvard University, and the University of Connecticut. Trained as a social scientist and a lawyer, Chris is the author of over 25 books and more than 120 scholarly articles on courts, law, and criminal justice policy.

Dr. Smith has been recognized as an outstanding teacher with MSU's Social Science Alumni Association Outstanding Teaching Award and Teacher-Scholar Award.

John Paul Stevens: Defender of Rights in Criminal Justice, (PDF) explores the judicial opinions and prison justice coverage affect of Justice John Paul Stevens, the U.S. Supreme Court’s best opinion writer in his 35-12 months profession on the nation’s highest court docket. Though Justice Stevens, a Republican appointee of President Gerald Ford, had an expert standing as a company antitrust regulation lawyer, he instantly declared himself because the Court’s major advocate of Miranda rights and prisoners’ rights when he arrived on the Court in 1975. In finding out Justice Stevens’s opinions on these subjects in addition to others, together with capital punishment and proper to counsel, the chapters of the ebook join his earlier experiences with the event of his views on rights in prison justice. In specific, the ebook examines his related experiences as a regulation clerk to Justice Wiley Rutledge in the Supreme Court’s 1947 time period, a decide on the U.S. court docket of appeals and a volunteer lawyer dealing with prison circumstances in Illinois to find how these experiences formed his understanding of the importance of rights in prison justice. For a number of points, corresponding to these affecting imprisoned offenders, Justice Stevens was a powerful defender of rights throughout his profession. For different points, like capital punishment, there’s proof that he grew to become increasingly more protecting of rights over the course of his Supreme Court profession. The textual content additionally examines how Justice Stevens grew to become more and more necessary as a number one dissenter in opposition to the discount of rights in prison justice because the Supreme Court’s composition grew to become more and more conservative in the Nineteen Eighties and afterward. Because of the character and problem of Justice Stevens’s quite a few and assorted opinions over the course of his prolonged profession, students discover it onerous to characterize his judicial philosophy and affect with easy labels. Yet in the realm of prison justice, shut examination of his work reveals that he earned a popularity and a permanent legacy as a remarkably necessary defender of constitutional rights. NOTE: The product only consists of the ebook, John Paul Stevens: Defender of Rights in Criminal Justice, in PDF. No access codes are included.    

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