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AGAINST CRIMINAL LAW LOCALISM.

Authors :
FISSELL, BRENNER M.
Source :
Maryland Law Review. 2022, Vol. 81 Issue 4, p1119-1164. 46p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Scholars have long called for greater localism in criminal justice as a response to the crises ofracialized mass incarceration and over-policing. A downward shift ojpower to smaller local governments is thought to maximize an array of values, including liberty, equality, and elficient experimentation, and also to allow./br criminal justice to better rellect societal viewpoints. In making these claims, localists have at times either explicitly included control over substantive criminal law in their devolutionary project, or have overlooked that more general calls for localism would presumably include this power. This Article critiques substantive criminal law localism, arguing that it counteracts the values that the localist project aims to achieve. Because of foundationalfeatures of local government law, localities have no authority to decl'iminalize conduct criminalized by a state-their option is only to add more offenses to the existing state code. Increased localism in substantive criminal law, then. functions as a one-way ratchet ®r more misdemeanor criminalization and all its attendant ills: incarceration, crippling.fines and fees, and the authorization of more policing, surveillance, and managerial social control of marginalized groups. Criminal justice localists should therefore excise substantive criminal law from their devolutionary program. and they should do so explicitly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00254282
Volume :
81
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Maryland Law Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158172841