Search for: "Alexandra Natapoff" Results 1 - 20 of 114
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7 Mar 2024, 8:50 am by Bob Ambrogi
Speakers include Harvard Law Professor Jonathan Zittrain; former Library Innovation law director Adam Ziegler; Ravel Law cofounders Nik Reed and Daniel Lewis; Free Law Project founder Mike Lissner; Legal Information Institute executive director Sara Frug; Angela Jaffee, account director at vLex and former national programs administrator for the Administrative Office of the United States Courts; Carl Malamud, founder of Public.Resource.Org; Harvard Law Professor Alexandra Natapoff;… [read post]
6 Apr 2023, 10:51 am by bndmorris
Alexandra Natapoff, Snitching:  Criminal Informants and the Erosion of American Justice (2022). 17. [read post]
10 May 2021, 6:00 am by Scott Limmer
“It wouldn’t open the door, it would open the floodgates to police entry into a home,” said Alexandra Natapoff, a Harvard Law professor who has written widely on the proliferation of misdemeanor crimes. [read post]
10 May 2021, 6:00 am by Scott Limmer
“It wouldn’t open the door, it would open the floodgates to police entry into a home,” said Alexandra Natapoff, a Harvard Law professor who has written widely on the proliferation of misdemeanor crimes. [read post]
24 Feb 2021, 3:30 am by Alexandra Natapoff
Alexandra Natapoff When I was a public defender in Baltimore, I often observed a chasm between my Black clients’ and neighbors’ experiences with police and White perceptions of policing. [read post]
23 Feb 2021, 4:05 pm by CrimProf BlogEditor
Alexandra Natapoff (Harvard Law School) has posted Criminal Municipal Courts (Harvard Law Review, Vol. 134, No. 3, p. 964, 2021) on SSRN. [read post]
6 May 2020, 11:38 am by CrimProf BlogEditor
Alexandra Natapoff (University of California, Irvine School of Law) has posted Atwater and the Misdemeanor Carceral State (Harvard Law Review Forum, Vol.133, No. 6, April 2020) on SSRN. [read post]
15 Oct 2019, 9:13 am by Michael Rushford
Irvine professor Alexandra Natapoff is probably correct in observing that "misdemeanor enforcement is much less sensitive to actual crime rates and influenced by changing political and cultural winds. [read post]
10 Oct 2019, 5:55 am by Gritsforbreakfast
"And our pal Alexandra Natapoff, now of UC Irvine and author of Punishment Without Crime, a book-length treatment of misdemeanor questions, suggested the trend might also relate to "changes in police arrest quota and promotion policies" or attempts to reduce "Jail costs. [read post]
17 Sep 2019, 7:56 am by Alicia Maule
  Related: Edwin’s Multimedia Wrongful Conviction Syllabus Misdemeanors by Alexandra Natapoff  Punishment Without Crime: How Our Massive Misdemeanor System Traps the Innocent and Makes America More Unequal by Alexandra Natapoff Queer (in)justice: the criminalization of LGBT people in the United States by Joey L. [read post]
26 Jul 2019, 2:54 am by Walter Olson
”] Electronic ankle monitors that not only report location, but also capture and report back audio of the wearer’s surroundings, raise difficult privacy issues [Kira Lerner, The Appeal via Chaz Arnett] Alexandra Natapoff discusses her recent book Punishment without Crime: How Our Massive Misdemeanor System Traps the Innocent and Makes America More Unequal [Cato event video with Jonathan Blanks; related Cato podcast] Tags: Boston, child abuse, crime and punishment,… [read post]
13 May 2019, 9:01 pm by Joseph Margulies
It is a voracious maw of saturation policing strategies, misdemeanor prosecutions, and fees, fines, and jail that bears no moral relationship to the problem it is meant to solve.A number of scholars and criminal justice reform organizations have been pointing this out for years, and books like Misdemeanorland, by Issa Kohler Hausmann, Punishment Without Crime, by Alexandra Natapoff, and A Pound of Flesh, by Alexes Harris, as well as white papers and policy proposals by… [read post]
3 May 2019, 1:32 pm by CrimProf BlogEditor
Alexandra Natapoff (University of California, Irvine School of Law) has posted The High Stakes of Low-Level Criminal Justice (Yale Law Journal, Vol. 128, No. 6, 2019) on SSRN. [read post]
24 Apr 2019, 9:00 pm
Alexandra Natapoff reviews Misdemeanorland, summarizing the book’s key contributions and extending its insights about New York City’s system of misdemeanor managerial social control to illuminate the broader dynamics and democratic significance of the U.S. misdemeanor process. [read post]
3 Feb 2019, 6:02 am by Gritsforbreakfast
One of Grits' favorite thinkers on justice topics, Alexandra Natapoff, whose new book about the misdemeanor system, Punishment Without Crime, I hope to review in the coming week, had a column in the New York Post with a Texas anecdote in the lede. [read post]