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24 Crime & Delinquency 1 (1978)

handle is hein.journals/cadq24 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Reexamining the President's

Crime Commission

The   Challenge of Crime
n   a Free   Society
after  Ten Years


          Samuel   Walker



          In the ten years following the initial publication of the report of the Presi-
          dent's Commission on Law  Enforcement and Administration of Justice,
          we have seen significant changes in criminal justice. Though widely con-
          sulted today, the report has become out of date. As a reference work, The
          Challenge of Crime in a Free Society (1967) remains valuable, but it no
          longer reflects the dominant issues in American criminal justice. The
          single most important change over the past decade has been the decline in
          faith in the idea of rehabilitation. The report of the President's Crime
          Commission  reflected the belief that alternative correctional programs
          could effectively attack the causes of crime; now, however, rehabilitation
          has become an unpopular goal. The debate today over deterrence and the
          growing interest in determinate sentencing are phenomena unforeseen by
          the commission's report. These changes in criminal justice are, in part, a
          result of the growing public frustration over the continued rise in the rate
          of violent crime. Another significant change-for which the President's
          Crime Commission  is partially responsible-is the increased awareness of
          the criminal justice system as a system. The development of a federal
          justice agency and the emergence of a new academic discipline of criminal
          justice represent the new strategy of approaching criminal justice as a un-
          ified system.


          In 1967  the President's Commission on Law  Enforcement  and Ad-
ninistration of Justice issued its report, The Challenge of Crime in a Free
ociety. This  was  the first comprehensive  survey of  the state of criminal
ustice since the publication of the Wickersham Commission   reports in 1931.
The President's Crime Commission,   as it was popularly known,  had labored
or two  years to produce not only The Challenge  of Crime in a Free Society,



  SAMUEL  WALKER   is Assistant Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice, University
f Nebraska at Omaha.
  The author would like to acknowledge Gordon and C. Shelia Misner for their comments and
riticism of an earlier draft of this article. Research for this article was supported in part by LEAA
;rants No. 72-CD-99-0002 and No. 73-CD-99-0002.


CRIME  & DELINQUENCY,  January 1978  1

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