Plea Bargaining, Conviction Without Trial, and the Global Administratization of Criminal Convictions

This article documents the diffusion of plea bargaining and other mechanisms to reach criminal convictions without a trial and argues that their spread implies what this article terms an administratization of criminal convictions in many corners of the world. Criminal convictions have been administr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of criminology 2021-01, Vol.4 (1), p.377-411
1. Verfasser: Langer, Máximo
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article documents the diffusion of plea bargaining and other mechanisms to reach criminal convictions without a trial and argues that their spread implies what this article terms an administratization of criminal convictions in many corners of the world. Criminal convictions have been administratized in two ways: ( a ) Trial-avoiding mechanisms have given a larger role to nonjudicature, administrative officials in the determination of who gets convicted and for which crimes, and ( b ) these decisions are made in proceedings that do not include a trial with its attached defendants' rights. The article also proposes a way this phenomenon could be quantitatively measured by articulating the rate of administratization of criminal convictions, a metric to allow for comparison among different jurisdictions. The article then presents cross-national data from 26 jurisdictions on their rate of administratization of criminal convictions and different hypotheses that may help explain variation across jurisdictions on this rate.
ISSN:2572-4568
2572-4568
DOI:10.1146/annurev-criminol-032317-092255