About This Blog

Judging Crimes is a blog about criminal law, violent crime and the judiciary, dedicated to making the liberal case for greater democratic control of the criminal justice system.  It's a "view from the trenches" because it's written by a practitioner, not an academic or journalist.  It examines the changing role of the judiciary in American society by looking at what judges actually do, rather than what they say.  I know what they do because I deal with the consequences every day. 

Opinions issued by judges, from Supreme Court justices on down, are justifications for the exercise of governmental power.  But it is the exercise of power itself that should command our attention, not the justifications.  Judging Crimes is concerned with the reality of judicial power rather than the verbal formulas used to defend it. 

American law professors have long liked to say they teach their students "to think like a lawyer."  Learning to think that way is a matter of internalizing certain assumptions.  The practice of judging is likewise based on a foundation of shared assumptions, among them that the United States Constitution -- a document of 8,335 words, the length of a book chapter -- provides an answer to every question.  Rather like a Ouija board.

These assumptions are so ingrained -- and their internalization is so necessary to the successful practice of law -- that most people who subscribe to them aren't even aware of having done so.  Judging Crimes will try to engage not just with the expressions of judicial power, but with the assumptions on which those expressions  rest.  

Judging Crimes won't be filled with daily entries commenting on the day's events or provide a best-of-the-web welter of links.  Many other blogs already do that, far better than I could hope to do.  (Check out these.)  Instead, Judging Crimes will contain pieces of a length that might seem long for a blog but would be short in a serious magazine.  I hope to post new pieces several times a week.

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Saturday
28Jun

Whatever Happened to Justice?

Please pardon the Lemon Pledge smell, but this blog had gotten dusty.  I've been away on a top-secret mission but now that the deal has been announced in Publishers Marketplace and the advance check has been deposited, even a lawyer such as myself, with a lawyer's steel-tripwire readiness to anticipate the absolute worst that could happen, can just about believe things are going to work out.

I've spent the past couple of months writing proposals for publishers and then the chapters of a new book, and with things getting close it didn't make much sense to divert writerly energies to the blogosphere.   Ah, but now -- now I can return to the late night glow of the monitor, the closest I'll ever come to realizing my secret ambition to be an overnight FM disc jockey during the early 1970s, a goal that  seems ever more distant with each passing year (for all that I've long since perfected the low stoned drone).

I've begun a page about the new book here, which you can also reach through the navigation pane to the right.  The description's what Wikipedia would call a stub, but it will, like the man turned into a newt, get better.

Reader Comments (1)

Glad you're back, and I can't wait for the book!
June 29, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterneilalice

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