Skip to content

Menu

LexBlog, Inc. logo
CommunitySub-MenuPublishersChannelsProductsSub-MenuBlog ProBlog PlusBlog PremierMicrositeSyndication PortalsAboutContactResourcesSubscribeSupport
Join
Search
Close

"The Injustice of Under-Policing in America"

By Douglas Berman on August 28, 2022
Email this postTweet this postLike this postShare this post on LinkedIn

The title of this post is the title of this new paper authored by Christopher Lewis and Adaner Usmani and published in the American Journal of Law and Equality. Here is part of its introduction:

Since 2014, viral images of Black people being killed at the hands of the police — Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Breonna Taylor, and many, many others  — have convinced much of the public that the American criminal legal system is broken. In the summer of 2020, nationwide protests against police racism and violence in the wake of George Floyd’s murder were, according to some analysts, the largest social movement in the history of the United States.  Activists and academics have demanded defunding the police and reallocating the funds to substitutes or alternatives. And others have called for abolishing the police altogether.  It has become common knowledge that the police do not solve serious crime, they focus far too much on petty offenses, and they are far too heavy-handed and brutal in their treatment of Americans — especially poor, Black people.  This is the so-called paradox of under-protection and over-policing that has characterized American law enforcement since emancipation.

The American criminal legal system is unjust and inefficient.  But, as we argue in this essay, over-policing is not the problem.  In fact, the American criminal legal system is characterized by an exceptional kind of under-policing, and a heavy reliance on long prison sentences, compared to other developed nations . In this country, roughly three people are incarcerated per police officer employed.  The rest of the developed world strikes a diametrically opposite balance between these twin arms of the penal state, employing roughly three and a half times more police officers than the number of people they incarcerate.  We argue that the United States has it backward.  Justice and efficiency demand that we strike a balance between policing and incarceration more like that of the rest of the developed world.  We call this the “First World Balance.”

We defend this idea in much more detail in a forthcoming book titled What’s Wrong with Mass Incarceration.  This essay offers a preliminary sketch of some of the arguments in the book.  In the spirit of conversation and debate, in this essay we err deliberately on the side of comprehensiveness rather than argumentative rigor.  One of us is a social scientist, and the other is a philosopher and legal scholar.  Our primary goal for this research project, and especially in this essay, is not to convince readers that we are correct — but rather to encourage a more explicit discussion of the empirical and normative bases of some pressing debates about the American criminal legal system.  Even if our answers prove unsound, we hope that the combination of empirical social science and analytic moral and political philosophy we contribute can help illuminate what alternative answers to those questions might have to look like to be sound.  In fact, because much of this essay (and the underlying book project) strikes a pessimistic tone, we would be quite happy to be wrong about much of what we argue here.

Douglas Berman

Douglas A. Berman is a professor of criminal law and sentencing at Ohio State University and author of Sentencing Law and Policy–the first blog cited by the U.S. Supreme Court–and the Marijuana Law, Policy & Reform blog. He is frequently consulted for…

Douglas A. Berman is a professor of criminal law and sentencing at Ohio State University and author of Sentencing Law and Policy–the first blog cited by the U.S. Supreme Court–and the Marijuana Law, Policy & Reform blog. He is frequently consulted for his expertise on capital sentencing by national policymakers, lawyers, and major media publications.

Read more about Douglas BermanEmailDouglas A.'s Linkedin ProfileDouglas A.'s Twitter Profile
Show more Show less
  • Posted in:
    Criminal
  • Blog:
    Sentencing Law and Policy
  • Organization:
    Law Professor Blogs Network
  • Article: View Original Source

LexBlog, Inc. logo
Facebook LinkedIn Twitter RSS
Real Lawyers
99 Park Row
  • About LexBlog
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Contact LexBlog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of Service
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Products
  • Blog Pro
  • Blog Plus
  • Blog Premier
  • Microsite
  • Syndication Portals
  • LexBlog Community
  • 1-800-913-0988
  • Submit a Request
  • Support Center
  • System Status
  • Resource Center

New to the Network

  • U.S. Legal Insights for Korean Businesses
  • Latin American Blog
  • Intellectual Property Law Blog
  • Insurance Law Blog
  • Global Projects View
Copyright © 2023, LexBlog, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Law blog design & platform by LexBlog LexBlog Logo