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Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management Clair A. Cripe

Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management By Clair A. Cripe

Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management by Clair A. Cripe


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Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management Summary

Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management by Clair A. Cripe

This updated third edition of Legal Aspects of Corrections Management provides a current, informative, and reader-friendly discussion of the contemporary legal issues impacting corrections management. Through the use of case law, this text provides readers with a practical understanding of how the First, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments relate to the day-to-day issues of running a prison, jail, and other corrections programs, such as probation and parole. The authors' combined corrections experience included such positions as General Counsel, Regional Counsel, and Correctional Program Officer, as well as working within corrections facilities. Their work involved advising corrections staff and management on the legal issues associated with policies and procedures. The authors also have extensive teaching experience in corrections law, the criminal justice system, and criminology. The benefits of such experiences are reflected in the comprehensive coverage of topics in this accessible and updated Third Edition. New to the Third Edition: -Cases and statistical information have been thoroughly updated. -Contains many new photos and figures throughout -New sections include: *Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 (RLUIPA) *Double Jeopardy *DNA Collection *Searches of Non-Inmates *Legal Challenges to the Method of Execution *Standards of Employee Conduct *Fair Labor Standards Act *Portal-to-Portal Act *Title VII and Inmate-Created Hostile Work Environment *The Americans with Disabilities Act *Death Penalty for Juvenile Offenders Key Features: -Includes engaging real-world examples of common problems and occurrences in corrections to provide students and practitioners with a good understanding of the legal aspects of corrections management. -Provides insight into the legal steps that should be anticipated in a correctional lawsuit. -Provides an accessible and easy-to-understand collection of Supreme Court and significant lower court rulings on key issues in corrections. With the focus on Supreme Court cases, the text has applicability nationwide. -Focuses on constitutional issues affecting such areas as inmate correspondence, visiting, and religion (First Amendment); search and seizure, privacy (Fourth Amendment); due process (Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments); equal protection (Fourteenth Amendment); and the death penalty, conditions of confinement (cruel and unusual punishment), and health care (Eighth Amendment). -Includes coverage of statutory and administrative law, as well as chapters on probation and parole, jails, juveniles, privatization, and the loss of rights of convicted persons. -Includes examples of relevant documents, such as a civil complaint; a sample presentence investigation report; a listing of inmate rights and responsibilities; of misconduct charges; and of mission statements for departments of corrections.

About Clair A. Cripe

Clair Cripe's career combines work in the corrections field and teaching in the area of constitutional law. His preparation for this work came from education at Oberlin College (A.B.) and at Harvard Law School (J.D.). After 3 years as a Navy JAG officer and a year as a trial lawyer for the Food and Drug Administration, he joined the Federal Bureau of Prisons in 1962, when its legal office was formed. In 1975, he became General Counsel of that agency, where he served until his retirement in 1990. As a member of the Bureau of Prisons executive staff, Clair was closely involved in policy decision-making for many years. He supervised hundreds of lawsuits involving prisoners' rights and the management of prisons. He personally handled many cases, from the trial court level to the Supreme Court. He initiated and personally taught training classes for corrections workers, from entry training for new employees to advanced corrections management. He personally reviewed all policy issuances of the federal prison agency.He developed and supervised many new prison programs (including disciplinary procedures for inmates, training for agency paralegals, and an inmate grievance system). Mr. Cripe taught for 15 years at the National Law Center (George Washington University) in the graduate law division. This wasa course in the law of sentencing and of constitutional rights for prisoners. He also taught a course in the law of corrections at the University of Maryland (Criminal Justice & Criminology Department). He was a frequent speaker at training seminars at the American Correctional Association and for its affiliates. He also presented seminars for federal judges on the law of sentencing and of prisoners' rights. Mike Pearlman brings to this work a combination of academic training, work experience, and teaching skills. He has a master's degree in Criminology and Corrections from Florida State University, as well as a master's degree in Government from Southern Illinois University, and a law degree from George Mason University. He has worked in the correctional field since 1968 in youth, medium, and maximum security adult facilities, as well as in the headquarters office of the Federal Bureau of Prisons. His work experience is varied - beginning with an externship as a psychometrist at a youth facility. This work involved administering psychological tests to and participating in individual and group counseling sessions with inmates. His formal work career includes assignments as a caseworker and casework supervisor, as a rules and regulations specialist, as the Executive Assistant to the General Counsel, and as the Legal Administrative Officer. As the Legal Administrative Officer, Mike's responsibilities included such duties as overseeing the Bureau of Prisons' inmate grievance program; the preparation of Bureau of Prisons rules governing the care, custody, treatment, and management of inmates; the legal training provided to new Bureau of Prisons staff; the legal intern program; and the Freedom of Information Program. Prior to his retirement, Mike was assigned responsibility for coordinating the Bureau of Prisons involvement in carrying out the Congressionally mandated closure of a prison system. In part, this involved the transfer of approximately 7,000 District of Columbia felons to Bureau of Prisons facilities. Mr. Pearlman has been an instructor in the criminal justice and sociology area for22 years, teaching at American University, Northern Virginia Community College, and George Mason University. He has taught a variety of subjects, such as Correctional Law, Introduction to Corrections, Administration of Correctional Institutions, Criminology, Criminal Law, Deviance, and Sociology of Punishment and Corrections.He has taught on both the undergraduate and graduate level.

Additional information

CIN1449639402VG
9781449639402
1449639402
Legal Aspects Of Corrections Management by Clair A. Cripe
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
20120229
616
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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