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justice reform lawsThe Atlantic
•71% Informative
Julian Zelizer : In the summer of 2020 , the moment seemed ripe for meaningful criminal-justice reform in America .
Zelizer says a new narrative has taken hold that criminal justice reform is dead, certainly in its bipartisan form.
He says the reform movement has entered a new era of quiet pragmatism, which focuses on practical solutions and consensus-building rather than ideological purity.
A new approach is taking hold to insert more fairness and evidence-driven reforms into a system that has long prioritized punitiveness with little regard for effectiveness.
Changes to the criminal-justice system that tend to receive the most bipartisan support are back-end reforms.
The U.S. continues to be an anomaly among wealthy nations with the highest incarceration rate in the world.
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