‘Bellin has provided a masterful and clear-eyed tour through the history of America's addiction to incarceration, with stories and statistics each step of the way, to illustrate how we got there. There is no better book that dissects what produced mass incarceration and how to disentangle the system that produces so much injustice in the name of justice.'
Brandon Garrett - Professor, Duke Law School Director, Wilson Center for Science and Justice, Author of Convicting the Innocent and Autopsy of a Crime Lab
‘In this nuanced account, Bellin uses an impressive array of data and history to explain the rise mass incarceration. It is a must read for anyone who seeks to understand why America has dramatically increased the number of people in prison and anyone who wants to reverse that trend while promoting public safety.'
Carissa Hessick - Professor, University of North Carolina Law School, Author of Punishment without Trial: Why Plea Bargaining Is a Bad Deal
‘Bellin provides the definitive account for why the United States has such a high incarceration rate, and he forcefully argues how we can fix our mass incarceration problem.'
Shon Hopwood - Associate Professor, Georgetown Law School Author of Law Man: My Story of Robbing Banks, Winning Supreme Court Cases, and Finding Redemption
‘… a highly informative and balanced book, offering a wide-ranging scope on the causes of mass incarceration and proposing practical solutions to reduce the prison population. … this book is an essential read for several audiences, including educators, policymakers, and novice readers - one that is unfamiliar with the phenomenon - because it strategically combines scholarly rigor with anecdotes and modern examples.’
Gabriela Perez
Source: Criminal Justice Review
‘This book is a solid introduction for anyone wanting to see the big picture about mass incarceration and deserves to be widely read. It combines valuable statistics with common sense arguments to lay out a comprehensive account of this complex process. Despite its nuance and academic structure, the work is accessible and written in clear language, which makes it as useful for law students and stakeholders in the criminal system as it is interesting for the lay reader.’
Source: Jotwell
‘a thorough and compelling book on the origins of and solutions for mass incarceration. … the book provides an excellent overview of the mass incarceration problem and charts a potential path forward. Bellin provides an interesting alternative to more abolitionist approaches to the problems of mass incarceration. … Recommended.’
J. A. Pierceson
Source: Choice
‘A thorough account of how concurrent trends in discretion within the legal system, excessive criminalization, sentencing, and vanishing parole and pardon systems have converged to bring about a modern crisis.’
Brandon Hasbrouck
Source: The Yale Law Journal