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The Fear of Too Much Justice - by Stephen B Bright & James Kwak (Paperback)
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Highlights
- The book John Grisham calls "a clear and poignant indictment of criminal injustice in America" Called "passionate and eye-opening" by Booklist, The Fear of Too Much Justice by the "legendary death penalty attorney" (CNN) Stephen B. Bright and legal scholar James Kwak, offers a heart-wrenching overview of how the criminal legal system fails to live up to the values of equality and justice.
- About the Author: Stephen B. Bright currently teaches law at Yale and Georgetown Universities.
- 368 Pages
- Social Science, Criminology
Description
Book Synopsis
The book John Grisham calls "a clear and poignant indictment of criminal injustice in America"Called "passionate and eye-opening" by Booklist, The Fear of Too Much Justice by the "legendary death penalty attorney" (CNN) Stephen B. Bright and legal scholar James Kwak, offers a heart-wrenching overview of how the criminal legal system fails to live up to the values of equality and justice. The book ranges from people convicted of crimes and condemned to death because of their race and poverty to poor people squeezed for cash by private probation companies because of trivial violations. Bright and Kwak also offer examples from places around the country that are making progress toward justice.
With a foreword by Bryan Stevenson, and now in an accessible paperback format, this "urgent call to action . . . is an invaluable resource" (Publishers Weekly).
Review Quotes
Praise for The Fear of Too Much Justice:
"For forty years Steve Bright has waged hand-to-hand legal combat to protect the poor and innocent, and to expose the truth behind capital punishment, wrongful convictions, corrupt prosecutors, incompetent judges, and all the other bad actors who have ruined our system."
--John Grisham, bestselling author
"[The Fear of Too Much Justice] examines the myriad ways in which the search for justice unravels once someone is charged with a crime, beginning with the nearly unlimited discretion accorded prosecutors to shape the case and exploit the advantages they have in resources and access to information."
--The New York Review of Books
"Bright has written a book that draws together insights gained from four decades at the coalface of US criminal justice. . . . [The Fear of Too Much Justice] chronicles the myriad ways poor defendants, disproportionately from Black and other minority communities, have the chips stacked against them."
--The Guardian
"A passionate and eye-opening behind-the-scenes account of the world of criminal justice and the lives impacted by the system's injustices."
--Booklist
"[An] urgent call to action. . . . [The Fear of Too Much Justice] is an invaluable resource for advocates of criminal justice reform."
--Publishers Weekly
"No one has more experience with the racism that infects our legal system than Steve Bright, and no one has worked more relentlessly to expose and eliminate it. Read this book. It will inform and infuriate you in equal measure, and equip you to join the long struggle toward justice."
--Thomas L. Dybdahl, author of When Innocence is Not Enough
"A virtual road map of the mistakes we continue to make, and the remedies that are obvious once you see them on the page."
--Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books
"The Fear of Too Much Justice is an elegant, meticulous, and inspiring book about the brutal reality of injustices in the American criminal justice system and changes that must be made to save individual lives and our collective humanity. With their searing analyses and palpable compassion, Steve Bright and James Kwak open our minds, touch our hearts, and move us forward."
--Janet Dewart Bell, co-editor of Race, Rights, and Redemption and author of Lighting the Fires of Freedom
"As the face of the Southern Center for Human Rights for more than three decades, iconic civil rights attorney Steve Bright has been waist-deep in the injustice of the criminal justice system since the 1970s. With co-author James Kwak, he powerfully catalogues the system's ills, and offers insightful remedies to help us overcome the fear of too much justice."
--Marc Bookman, author of A Descending Spiral "Finally, a book that takes Justice Brennan's famous line to its logical conclusions, calling into question every aspect of the way that we criminalize and punish in the United States today. It will be an indispensable teaching tool, providing a holistic view of the problems with criminal courts and the criminal legal system, from top to bottom."
--Jocelyn Simonson, professor of law and associate dean of research and scholarship, Brooklyn Law School, and author of Radical Acts of Justice
--Marc Mauer, former executive director of The Sentencing Project and co-author of The Meaning of Life
About the Author
Stephen B. Bright currently teaches law at Yale and Georgetown Universities. He was the longtime director of the Southern Center for Human Rights and has won multiple capital cases in the Supreme Court. A recipient of the American Bar Association's Thurgood Marshall Award, Bright has been the subject of two books, Proximity to Death (William S. McFeely) and Finding Life on Death Row (Katya Lexin), and a film, Fighting for Life in the Death Belt (Adam Elend and Jeff Marks). He lives in Lexington, Kentucky. James Kwak is vice chair of the Southern Center for Human Rights, former professor of law at the University of Connecticut, author of Economism: Bad Economics and the Rise of Inequality, and co-author with Simon Johnson of White House Burning: The Founding Fathers, Our National Debt, and Why It Matters to You, and the New York Times bestseller 13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown. He is also the co-author of The Baseline Scenario, a leading blog on economics and public policy. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts.