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The Rich Get Richer and The Poor Get Prison : Ideology, Class, and Criminal Justice » (9th Edition)

Book cover image of The Rich Get Richer and The Poor Get Prison : Ideology, Class, and Criminal Justice by Jeffrey Reiman

Authors: Jeffrey Reiman, Paul Leighton
ISBN-13: 9780205688425, ISBN-10: 020568842X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Date Published: August 2009
Edition: 9th Edition

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Author Biography: Jeffrey Reiman

Jeffrey Reiman is the William Fraser McDowell Professor of Philosophy at American University in Washington, D.C. He was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1942. He received his B.A. in philosophy from Queens College in 1963, and his Ph.D. in philosophy from Pennsylvania State University in 1968. He was a Fulbright Scholar in India during 1966–1967. He joined the American University faculty in 1970, in the Center for the Administration of Justice (now called the Department of Justice, Law and Society of the School of Public Affairs). After several years of holding a joint appointment in the Justice program and the Department of Philosophy and Religion, Dr. Reiman joined the Department of Philosophy and Religion full-time in 1988, becoming director of the Master’s Program in Philosophy and Social Policy. He was named William Fraser McDowell Professor of Philosophy in 1990. He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi honor societies, and past president of the American University Phi Beta Kappa chapter. In addition to The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison: Ideology, Class, and Criminal Justice, Dr. Reiman is the author of In Defense of Political Philosophy (1972), Justice and Modern Moral Philosophy (1990), Critical Moral Liberalism: Theory and Practice (1997), The Death Penalty: For and Against (with Louis P. Pojman, 1998), Abortion and the Ways We Value Human Life (1999), and more than 60 articles in philosophy and criminal justice journals and anthologies. He is also coeditor, with Paul Leighton, of the anthology Criminal Justice Ethics (2001).

Paul Leighton is a Professor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology at Eastern Michigan University. He received his B.A. in Criminal Justice from the State University of New York at Albany in 1986, and is indebted to Graeme Newman for helping to direct him away from law school to the Justice, Law and Society program at American University. While at American University, he met Jeffrey Reiman and assisted with revisions of the fourth edition of The Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Prison. He has worked on every edition since then. Dr Leighton received his Ph.D. in Sociology and Justice from American University in 1995. He has been the North American Editor of Critical Criminology: An International Journal, and was named Critical Criminologist of the Year by the American Society of Criminology’s Division on Critical Criminology. Dr. Leighton is the co-author of Punishment for Sale (with Donna Selman, 2010) and Class, Race, Gender and Crime (with Gregg Barak and Jeanne Flavin, 2nd edition, 2007). He is also coeditor, with Jeffrey Reiman, of the anthology Criminal Justice Ethics (2001). In addition to his publications, Dr Leighton is webmaster for StopViolence.com, PaulsJusticePage.com and PaulsJusticeBlog.com. He is Vice President of the local chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and is Vice President of the Board of SafeHouse, the local shelter and advocacy center for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault.

Book Synopsis

This best-selling text examines the premise that the criminal justice system is biased against the poor from start to finish, from the definition of what constitutes a crime through the process of arrest, trial, and sentencing.

Also, this text discusses how this bias is accompanied with a general refusal to remedy the causes of crime—poverty, lack of education, and discrimination.

The author argues that actions of well-off people, such as their refusal to make workplaces safe, refusal to curtail deadly pollution, promotion of unnecessary surgery, and prescriptions for unnecessary drugs, cause occupational and environmental hazards to innocent members of the public and produce just as much death, destruction, and financial loss as so-called crimes of the poor. However, these acts of the well-off are rarely treated as crimes, and when they are, they are never treated as severely as crimes of the poor.

NEW: This text now has a companion 25 article reader: The Rich get Richer and the Poor get Prison: A Reader (ISBN: 0-205-68842-X). Visit this book's website for a full table of contents.

Table of Contents

IN THIS SECTION:

1.) BRIEF

2.) COMPREHENSIVE

BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction: Criminal Justice through the Looking Glass, or Winning by Losing

Chapter 1: Crime Control in America: Nothing Succeeds like Failure

Chapter 2: A Crime by Any Other Name...

Chapter 3: ...and the Poor Get Prison

Chapter 4: To the Vanquished Belong the Spoils: Who Is Winning the Losing War against Crime?

Conclusion: Criminal Justice or Criminal Justice

Appendix I: The Marxian Critique of Criminal Justice

Appendix II: Between Philosophy and Criminology

Index

COMPREHENSIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS:

Introduction: Criminal Justice through the Looking Glass, or Winning by Losing

Chapter 1: Crime Control in America: Nothing Succeeds like Failure

Designed To Fail

Three Excuses That Will Not Wash, Or How We Could Reduce Crime If We Wanted To

Known Sources of Crime

What Works To Reduce Crime

How Crime Pays: Erikson and Durkheim

A Word about Foucault

Chapter 2: A Crime by Any Other Name...

What’s In a Name?

The Carnival Mirror

Criminal Justice as Creative Art

A Crime by Any Other Name...

Chapter 3: ...and the Poor Get Prison

Weeding Out the Wealthy

...And the Poor Get Prison

Chapter 4: To the Vanquished Belong the Spoils: Who Is Winning the Losing War against Crime?

Why Is The Criminal Justice System Failing?

The Poverty of Criminals and the Crime of Poverty

Ideology, Or How to Fool Enough of the People Enough of the Time

Conclusion: Criminal Justice or Criminal Justice

The Crime of Justice

Rehabilitating Criminal Justice in America

Appendix I: The Marxian Critique of Criminal Justice

Appendix II: Between Philosophy and Criminology

Index

Subjects