Coercion to Compromise: Plea Bargaining, the Courts, and the Making of Political Authority

Awards:   Winner of Runner-up for the 2008 British Society of Criminology Book Prize.
Author:   Mary E. Vogel (Visiting Assistant Professor, Law and Society Program, Visiting Assistant Professor, Law and Society Program, University of California, Santa Barbara)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195101751


Pages:   448
Publication Date:   29 November 2007
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Coercion to Compromise: Plea Bargaining, the Courts, and the Making of Political Authority


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Awards

  • Winner of Runner-up for the 2008 British Society of Criminology Book Prize.

Overview

"Plea bargaining is one of the most striking features of American courts. The vast majority of criminal convictions today are produced through bargained pleas. Where does the practice come from? Whose interests does it serve? Often plea bargaining is imagined as a corruption of the court during the post-World War II years, paradoxically rewarding those who appear guilty rather than those claiming innocence. Yet, as Mary Vogel argues in this pathbreaking history, plea bargaining's roots are deeper and more distinctly American than is commonly supposed. During the Age of Jackson, amidst crime and violence wrought by social change, the courts stepped forward as agents of the state to promote the social order. Plea bargaining arose during the 1830s and 1840s as part of this process of political stabilization and an effort to legitimate institutions of self-rule--accomplishments that were vital to Whig efforts to restore order and reconsolidate their political power. To this end, the tradition of episodic leniency from British common law was recrafted into a new cultural form--plea bargaining--that drew conflicts into the courts while maintaining elite discretion over sentencing policy. In its reliance on the mechanism of leniency, the courts were attempting a sort of social ""triage""--sorting those who could be reclaimed as industrious and productive citizens from marginals and transients. The ""worthy"" often paid fines and were returned to their community under the watchful eyes of their intercessors and that most powerful web of social control, that of everyday life. Created during a period of social mobility, plea bargaining presumed that those with much to lose through conviction would embrace individual reform. Today, when many defendants who come before the court have much less in the way of prospects to lose, leniency may be more likely to be regarded with cynicism, as an act of weakness by the state, and plea bargaining may grow more problematic."

Full Product Details

Author:   Mary E. Vogel (Visiting Assistant Professor, Law and Society Program, Visiting Assistant Professor, Law and Society Program, University of California, Santa Barbara)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 22.90cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 15.50cm
Weight:   0.641kg
ISBN:  

9780195101751


ISBN 10:   0195101758
Pages:   448
Publication Date:   29 November 2007
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

1: Plea Bargaining: A Distinctly American Practice 2: Liberty and the Republican Citizen: Rise of the Rule of Law 3: Social Order and the Law: Marxian and Weberian Views 4: Contours of Bargaining: Patterns of Plea and Confession 5: Episodic Leniency in Britain and America 6: The Emergence of Plea Bargaining Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

A magnificent achievement. Coercion to Compromise is a comprehensive, yet subtle and theoretically rich history of the origins of plea bargaining in the nineteenth-century Massachusetts courts. An important book, [it] will reward its readers tenfold. --Susan Silbey, author of The Common Place of Law<br> Plea bargaining has long been a controversial practice, symbolizing either unwarranted leniency for offenders and the deliberate subversion of formal legal authority, or an emphasis on efficiency at the expense of justice. Mary Vogel explores its distinctively American origins in the context of social and political change in early nineteenth-century America in a book which raises the analysis of the criminal process to a new level of theoretical sophistication. --Dr. Keith Hawkins, author of Law as Last Resort<br> Coercion to Compromise is a powerful, important book. [Vogel] not only enlarges our understanding of the foundations of American criminal justice, but also illuminates the source of critical failures underlying plea bargaining in our own time. This is a pathbreaking work using the methods of social science and history to provide an authoritative and original analysis of previously uncharted terrain. --Frank Munger, author of Rights of Inclusion<br> This ambitious and compelling study provides a novel explanation for the emergence of plea bargaining in the American judiciary system. Vogel has written a social history of the first order and in the process sheds light on the limitations of plea bargaining in the contemporary context. --Kitty Calavita, coauthor of Big Money Crime<br>


<br> A magnificent achievement. Coercion to Compromise is a comprehensive, yet subtle and theoretically rich history of the origins of plea bargaining in the nineteenth-century Massachusetts courts. An important book, [it] will reward its readers tenfold. --Susan Silbey, author of The Common Place ofLaw<p><br> Plea bargaining has long been a controversial practice, symbolizing either unwarranted leniency for offenders and the deliberate subversion of formal legal authority, or an emphasis on efficiency at the expense of justice. Mary Vogel explores its distinctively American origins in the context of social and political change in early nineteenth-century America in a book which raises the analysis of the criminal process to a new level of theoretical sophistication. --Dr. Keith Hawkins, author of Law as Last Resort<p><br> Coercion to Compromise is a powerful, important book. [Vogel] not only enlarges our understanding of the foundations of American criminal justice, but also illuminates the source of critical failures underlying plea bargaining in our own time. This is a pathbreaking work using the methods of social science and history to provide an authoritative and original analysis of previously uncharted terrain. --Frank Munger, author of Rights of Inclusion<p><br> This ambitious and compelling study provides a novel explanation for the emergence of plea bargaining in the American judiciary system. Vogel has written a social history of the first order and in the process sheds light on the limitations of plea bargaining in the contemporary context. --Kitty Calavita, coauthor of Big Money Crime<p><br>


A magnificent achievement. Coercion to Compromise is a comprehensive, yet subtle and theoretically rich history of the origins of plea bargaining in the nineteenth-century Massachusetts courts. An important book, [it] will reward its readers tenfold. --Susan Silbey, author of The Common Place ofLaw Plea bargaining has long been a controversial practice, symbolizing either unwarranted leniency for offenders and the deliberate subversion of formal legal authority, or an emphasis on efficiency at the expense of justice. Mary Vogel explores its distinctively American origins in the context of social and political change in early nineteenth-century America in a book which raises the analysis of the criminal process to a new level of theoretical sophistication. --Dr. Keith Hawkins, author of Law as Last Resort Coercion to Compromise is a powerful, important book. [Vogel] not only enlarges our understanding of the foundations of American criminal justice, but also illuminates the source of critical failures underlying plea bargaining in our own time. This is a pathbreaking work using the methods of social science and history to provide an authoritative and original analysis of previously uncharted terrain. --Frank Munger, author of Rights of Inclusion This ambitious and compelling study provides a novel explanation for the emergence of plea bargaining in the American judiciary system. Vogel has written a social history of the first order and in the process sheds light on the limitations of plea bargaining in the contemporary context. --Kitty Calavita, coauthor of Big Money Crime


Author Information

Dr. Mary E. Vogel is Reader at King's College London School of Law having received her doctorate from Harvard University and taught previously at the University of Michigan and the University of California at Santa Barbara.

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