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  3. Justice Abandoned by Rachel E. Barkow
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Justice Abandoned by Rachel E. Barkow

April 10, 2025
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In her new book, Justice Abandoned: How the Supreme Court Ignored the Constitution and Enabled Mass Incarceration, Rachel E. Barkow of NYU School of Law examines the role that the nation’s highest court bears in for America’s mass incarceration crisis, tracing how six pivotal Supreme Court decisions have undermined constitutional protections, empowered coercive plea deals, and fueled racial disparities—while offering a compelling case for why the Court’s own originalist principles demand a reversal of these damaging precedents.

From the book excerpt:

With less than 5 percent of the world’s population and almost a quarter of its prisoners, America indisputably has a mass incarceration problem. How did it happen? Tough-on-crime politics and a racially loaded drug war are obvious and important culprits, but another factor has received remarkably little attention: the Supreme Court. The Constitution contains numerous safeguards that check the state’s power to lock people away. Yet since the 1960s the Supreme Court has repeatedly disregarded these limits, bowing instead to unfounded claims that adherence to the Constitution is incompatible with public safety.

In Justice Abandoned, Rachel Barkow highlights six Supreme Court decisions that paved the way for mass incarceration. These rulings have been crucial to the meteoric rise in pretrial detention and coercive plea bargaining. They have enabled disproportionate sentencing and overcrowded prison conditions. And they have sanctioned innumerable police stops and widespread racial discrimination. If the Court were committed to protecting constitutional rights and followed its standard methods of interpretation, none of these cases would have been decided as they were, and punishment in America would look very different than it does today.

More than just an autopsy of the Supreme Court’s errors, Justice Abandoned offers a roadmap for change. Barkow shows that the originalist methodology adopted by the majority of the current Court demands overturning the unconstitutional policies underlying mass incarceration. If the justices genuinely believe in upholding the Constitution in all cases, then they have little choice but to reverse the wrongly decided precedents that have failed so many Americans.

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