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103 Marq. L. Rev. 1179 (2019-2020)
Robbery, Recidivism, and the Limits of the Criminal Justice System

handle is hein.journals/marqlr103 and id is 1199 raw text is: 








  ROBBERY, RECIDIVISM, AND THE LIMITS
      OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM

   RICHARD WRIGHT*,WILLIAM J. SABOL**, & THADDEUS L. JOHNSON***

   The roughly 175, 000 convicted robbers currently serving time in the U.S.
eventually will be released Over half of them will have been there before.
Locked up as mostly young men and women, they will return to the communities
they left behind, possessing little more than a criminal record and the clothes
on their back. Many will find themselves owing supervision fees to the state;
almost all will face legal barriers to employment, decent housing, political
participation, and other sources of social inclusion. What can the criminal
justice system--a system   designed to prevent and deter lawbreaking-
realistically do to keep them from returning to prison? This Article explores
that question by drawing on published accounts from a sample of86 individuals
actively involved in committing armed robberies, many of whom have returned
to crime after being released from prison. The emphasis throughout is on the
ways in which pervasive social exclusion, both a cause and a consequence of
their lawbreaking, challenges our ability to reintegrate such offenders who
in reality were not integrated to begin with.

I. TEHE FACTS OF ROBBERY  ......................................................................... 1180
II. THE ETIOLOGICAL CYCLE OF ROBBERY ................................................ 1184
III. THE THREAT OF LEGAL CONSEQUENCES ............................................. 1187
IV. CONSCIENCE AND ANTICIPATED FEELINGS OF GUILT ......................... 1189
V. RECIDIVISM  M EETS REALITY   ................................................................ 1190
VI. PRIMUM   EST UT NON  NOCERE ............................................................. 1193
VII. THE LIMITS OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM ................................ 1197



    * Richard Wright is Regents' Professor of Criminal Justice and Criminology in the Andrew
Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.
    ** William J. Sabol is Second Century Initiative Professor of Criminal Justice and Criminology
in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.
    *** Thaddeus L. Johnson is a Ph.D. candidate in Criminal Justice and Criminology in the
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. The authors thank the
participants at the 2019 Responding to the Threat of Violent Recidivism Symposium hosted by
Marquette University Law School for constructive comments on an earlier draft.

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