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Public Defenders and the American Justice System
Book Code: C8576
ISBN: 0-275-98576-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98576-9
224 pages, figure; tables
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 6/30/2005
List Price: $51.95 (UK Sterling Price: £29.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • Since the Supreme Court's ruling in Gideon v. Wainwright in 1963, states have been required to provide free counsel for those who are charged with serious crimes and cannot afford a lawyer. Establishment of a public defender system has been the most common response. This solution creates an office of publicly paid defense lawyers, which is in many respects the counterpart of the prosecutor's office. However, from the outset, public defenders have been stereotyped as cop-out artists, lazy, overburdened, or overly zealous. Wice, a leading scholar of the US criminal justice system, provides a marvelous antidote to these impressions. He offers a meticulous, fact-based study that paints a nuanced, insightful portrait of public defenders. Focusing on a single public defenders' office in one city (Newark, NJ), he provides a careful account of its functioning in a municipality rife with crime and few resources. What he finds is a remarkable group of lawyers, dedicated to the cause of justice, who perform tolerably well under almost impossible conditions. However, the book is no panegyric. Wice describes a flawed institution and in his concluding chapter offers suggestions for reform. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
    —Choice
    February 2006
Description: Eighty to ninety percent of the nation's urban criminal defendants are defended in court by public defenders. Thus, understanding how these defender programs operate, their effectiveness and the quality of professional life for these beleaguered and often underpaid attorneys, is a critical factor in improving local criminal justice systems. What is it like to practice law in such an inhospitable environment, where clients often revile their counsel and prosecutors hold defenders in contempt? How does a public defender maintain self-esteem and dignity? What are the particular problems and obstacles of public defender offices? And how might such departments overcome these obstacles so that defendants and defenders, as well as the public, benefit? In vivid prose, and with vignettes and quotes from the lawyers themselves, Wice answers these questions and paints a truer picture of the state of public defenders offices than most of us have from television and the media. Through a colorful profile of a reform-minded public defender's office Newark, N.J., one of the nation's most crime-ridden smaller cities, Wice examines the public defender system and shows how even the smallest reforms, especially those that address quality of life and work for public defenders, can make a big difference. Comparing the smaller defender's office to larger ones in such cities as New York and Chicago, which have not instituted significant reforms, the author illustrates the successes that can be found when change is implemented. Flaws remain, but with improved services and work environments, this important component of the overburdened criminal justice system can function more effectively, creating a system that benefits lawyers, defendants, and the community alike.
Table of Contents:
  • List of Essex County Public Defenders
  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface
  • The Right to Counsel for Indigent Defendants: A National Perspective
  • Public Defender Agencies: The Traditional Approach
  • The Essex County Regional Defender Office: The Evolution and Organization of a Reform Defender System
  • The Staff Attorneys: Background and Career Patterns
  • Procedural Issues: Processing and Litigating Cases
  • The Work Environment and Courthouse Relationships
  • Personal and Professional Issues
  • Lessons Learned: An Agenda for Public Defender Reform
  • Notes
  • Sources
  • Bibliographical Statement
LC Card Number: 2005006491
LCC Class: KF9646
Dewey Class: 345
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