From the renowned founder of The Bail Project, an eye-opening book about why we allow money to play any role in the administration of justice Over 90 percent of people held in jail pretrial because they cannot pay cash bail will plead guilty, whether they committed a crime or not. Cash bail not only creates a two-tier system of justiceone for those with money and one for those withoutit also drives racial disparities in the criminal justice system and is responsible for almost all net jail growth in America over the past two decades. There is perhaps no other component of America's justice system that is so broken, yet completely integral to the current operation of our courts, as bail. With engaging and accessible prose, Robin Steinberg, founder and CEO of The Bail Project, and her colleague Camilo Ramirez tell the shocking true stories of people jailed by poverty while also detailing:
- the history of bail, from its inception in medieval England, as an incentive for people to return to court, to modern America where it is a mechanism for detention
- the roles lawyers, judges, and legislators have in the legal system and how and why they have become complicit in excessive bail
- how the current bail system undermines the promise of a fair and just system and the U.S. Constitution
- effective alternatives to cash bail
For fans of
The Race to Incarcerate by Marc Mauer and James Kilgore's
Understanding Mass Incarceration, Steinberg, whose previous book was called powerfully insightful reading by
Kirkus Reviews, and Ramirez provide an unprecedented look at America's cash bail system and inspire us to imagine a better, fairer way forward.
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