About Guilt and Innocence: The Origins, Development, and Future of Constitutional Criminal Procedure

by
Donald A. Drippsauthor

DONALD A. DRIPPS is the James Levee Professor of Law and Criminal Procedure at the University of Minnesota Law School.

About Guilt and Innocence: The Origins, Development, and Future of Constitutional Criminal Procedure

20021230

Praeger

Pages 320
Topics Politics, Law, and Government;

Cite this eBook

  • eBook

    9780313013249

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Table of Contents

Table of Contents

About Guilt and Innocence: The Origins, Development, and Future of Constitutional Criminal Procedure

Author(s): Dripps, Donald;
Contributors: Dripps, Donald;
Abstract:

This remarkably original and vital work argues that the problems are rooted in a disjunction between prevailing values and the prevailing doctrinal regime in constitutional law. Dripps asserts that the Fourteenth Amendment's more general standards of due process and equal protection encompass the values that ought to govern the criminal process.

Why does the American criminal justice system punish too many innocent people, failing to punish so many guilty parties and imposing a disproportionate burden on blacks? This remarkably original and vital work argues that the problems are rooted in a disjunction between prevailing values and the prevailing doctrinal regime in constitutional law. Dripps asserts that the Fourteenth Amendment's more general standards of due process and equal protection encompass the values that ought to govern the criminal process.

Criminal procedure ought to be about protecting the innocent, punishing the guilty, and doing equal justice. Modern legal doctrine, however, hinders these pursuits by concentrating on the specific procedural safeguards contained in the Bill of Rights. Dripps argues that a renewed focus on the Fourteenth Amendment would be more consistent than current law with both our values and with the legitimate sources of Constitutional law, and will promote the instrumental values the criminal process ought to serve. Legal and constitutional scholars will find his account of our criminal system's disarray compelling, and his argument as to how it may be reconstructed important and provoking.

SortTitle: about guilt and innocence: the origins, development, and future of constitutional criminal procedure
Author Info:
Donald A. Drippsauthor

DONALD A. DRIPPS is the James Levee Professor of Law and Criminal Procedure at the University of Minnesota Law School.

eISBN-13: 9780313013249
Cover Image URL: ~~FreeAttachments/9780313013249.jpg
Print ISBN-13: 9780275977306
Entry Code: EC7730
Imprint: Praeger
Pages: 320
Publication Date: 20021230
Series: Non-Series
Subtitle: The Origins, Development, and Future of Constitutional Criminal Procedure