Over the past 20 years, conservatives have often been at the forefront of criminal justice reform efforts, including to reduce mandatory minimum sentencing, lengthy prison terms, and excessive criminal fines and fees and to improve conditions in prisons and jails. Rejecting the Nixonian quot law and order quot impulse, criminal justice reform has increasingly become incorporated into the conservative political self-identity. But this has been an elite-driven phenomenon, and it is open to question whether the roots of that political identity are deep enough to withstand the rising salience of crime as a political issue. This review traces how criminal justice reform came to be incorporated into the conservative political identity, raises questions concerning its staying power in the face of rising crime and increasingly strident progressive demands, and proposes some principles that might ground a more lasting conservative commitment to a just, proportionate system of criminal justice.
CITATION STYLE
Rizer, A. L. (2023, January 27). Can Conservative Criminal Justice Reform Survive a Rise in Crime? Annual Review of Criminology. Annual Reviews Inc. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-criminol-030920-090259
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.