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New. 0791405346. *** FREE UPGRADE to Courier/Priority Shipping Upon Request ***-*** IN STOCK AND IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT-FLAWLESS COPY, PRISTINE, NEVER OPENED--237 pages; clean and crisp, tight and bright pages, with no writing or markings to the text. --DESCRIPTION: This book discusses in depth the rise and fall of the determinate ideal, once heralded as a replacement to the old order of criminal justice. Using new materials and combining political, empirical, and theoretical perspectives, Griset examines the attempt in New York State to establish determinate sentencing-'punishment for its own sake'-to replace the existing policy of the backdrop of a national reform agenda, she analyzes the development and ultimate failure of a major social movement. REVIEW: Booknews: "Griset examines the attempt in New York State to establish determinate sentencing--policy of rehabilitation. She combines political, empirical, and theoretical perspectives in portraying New York's experience against the backdrop of a national reform agenda, analyzing the development and ultimate failure of a major social movement." * * FS REVIEW: As we watch the U. S. Supreme Court chop down the federal mandatory sentencing laws in slow motion over the next decade or two, we will the cities of America begin to harvest the rotten fruit of the judicial denial of the reality that the rehabilitative ideal is a fraud, and that neither the one polar extreme, rehabilitation, nor the other, vengeance, is capable of serving as the ground of criminal responsibility. Only when we realize that, as was already evident in ancient Greece, it is incapacitation alone that is capable of providing this ground will we be positioned to confront the true relationship of sentencing to crime prevention in our analyses of crime causation. --with a bonus offer--