Book contents
- The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- About the Contributors
- Introduction: Past as Prologue
- Part I The Process Is the Punishment
- 1 Adversarial Bias and the Criminal Process: Infusing the Organizational Perspective on Criminal Courts with Insights from Behavioral Science
- 2 Malcolm Feeley’s Concept of Law
- 3 Process as Intergenerational Punishment
- 4 The Process Is the Problem
- Part II Court Reform on Trial
- Part III Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State
- Part IV Political Liberalism and the Legal Complex
- Index
- Books in the Series
- References
1 - Adversarial Bias and the Criminal Process: Infusing the Organizational Perspective on Criminal Courts with Insights from Behavioral Science
from Part I - The Process Is the Punishment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 April 2019
- The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
- Cambridge Studies in Law and Society
- The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
- Copyright page
- Contents
- About the Contributors
- Introduction: Past as Prologue
- Part I The Process Is the Punishment
- 1 Adversarial Bias and the Criminal Process: Infusing the Organizational Perspective on Criminal Courts with Insights from Behavioral Science
- 2 Malcolm Feeley’s Concept of Law
- 3 Process as Intergenerational Punishment
- 4 The Process Is the Problem
- Part II Court Reform on Trial
- Part III Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State
- Part IV Political Liberalism and the Legal Complex
- Index
- Books in the Series
- References
Summary
Generations of criminal courtroom scholars were raised on Malcolm Feeley’s book The Process Is the Punishment (1979b) as the gold standard of criminal courtroom ethnography. In the book, and in some of his other work from the 1970s and early 1980s (Feeley 1973; Feeley 1977; Feeley, 1982), Feeley examined lower criminal courts from an organizational perspective, a view that shaped several of the classic criminal court studies, such as Eisenstein and Jacob’s Felony Justice (1978) and Nardulli’s The Courtroom Elite (1978). In the first of Feeley’s works in this vein, “Two Models of the Criminal Process: An Organizational Perspective” (1973), he offered a sociological counterpart to Herbert Packer’s The Limits of the Criminal Sanction (1968) and a primer on courts as organizations.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Legal Process and the Promise of JusticeStudies Inspired by the Work of Malcolm Feeley, pp. 19 - 35Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
References
References
Cases
Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963)
Connick v. Thompson, 563 U.S. 51 (2011)
Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966)