Freshly Printed - allow 8 days lead
Couldn't load pickup availability
The Judicial Response to Police Killings in Latin America
Inequality and the Rule of Law
This book examines the effect of social inequality, political influence and institutional design on the effectiveness of Latin American legal systems.
Daniel M. Brinks (Author)
9781107405097, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 July 2012
302 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm, 0.45 kg
' … an innovative study that draws on both socio-legal studies and comparative politics and combines quantitative and qualitative analysis. It represents a highly significant contribution to the growing body of literature on democracy and the rule of law in Latin America.' Journal of Latin American Studies
This book documents the corrosive effect of social exclusion on democracy and the rule of law. It shows how marginalization prevents citizens from effectively engaging even the best legal systems, how politics creeps into prosecutorial and judicial decision making, and how institutional change is often nullified by enduring contextual factors. It also shows how some institutional arrangements can overcome these impediments. The argument is based on extensive field work and original data on the investigation and prosecution of more than 500 police homicides in five legal systems in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay. It includes both qualitative analyses of individual violations and prosecutions and quantitative analyses of broad patterns within and across jurisdictions. The book offers a structured comparison of police, prosecutorial, and judicial institutions in each location, and shows that analyses of any one of these organizations in isolation misses many of the essential dynamics that underlie an effective system of justice.
1. Effectiveness and inequality in the legal system
2. Charting injustice in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay
3. Informational and normative shifts across jurisdictions
4. Buenos Aires - political interference and informational dependence
5. Sao Paolo - normative autonomy and informational failures
6. Uruguay - strong results from a weak system
7. Cordoba - high levels of inequality in a strong system
8. Salvador da Bahia - social cleansing under political and judicial indifference
9. Binding leviathan.
Subject Areas: Human rights [JPVH], Political structure & processes [JPH], Comparative politics [JPB]
