Crime and the Legal System

Crime in the Making: Pathways and Turning Points through Life

Crime and the Employment of Disadvantaged Youths

Vulnerable Populations and Transformative Law Teaching

The essays included in this volume began as presentations at the March 19–20, 2010 “Vulnerable Populations and Economic Realities” teaching conference organized and hosted by Golden Gate University School of Law and co-sponsored by the Society of American Law Teachers (SALT). That conference, generously funded by a grant from The Elfenworks Foundation, brought together law faculty, practitioners, and students to reexamine how issues of race, gender, sexual identity, nationality, disability, and generally—outsider status—are linked to poverty.

One in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008

Who Survives on Death Row? An Individual and Contextual Analysis

Race, Ethnicity, and Youth Perceptions of Criminal Injustice

Understanding Why Did Crime Rates Fall in the 1990s

Racial Policy and Racial Conflict in the Urban United States, 1869–1924

The Political Sociology of the Death Penalty: A Pooled Time-Series Analysis

Black Neighbors, Higher Crime? The Role of Racial Stereotypes in Evaluations of Neighborhood Crime

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