• Children, Development, and the Troubled Foundations of Miller v. Alabama
    Law and Social Inquiry 44 (3): 752-770. 2019.
    In Miller v. Alabama, the U.S. Supreme Court held that mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles violate the Eighth Amendment, grounding its reasoning in claims about adolescent development, diminished culpability, and reduced moral responsibility. This article offers a critical examination of the developmental foundation of the Court’s juvenile sentencing jurisprudence. While developmental psychology and neuroscience play an increasingly central role in constitutional punishment doc…Read more
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    Must Penal Law Be Insulated from Public Influence?
    Law and Philosophy 40 (1): 67-87. 2020.
    Punishment and democracy appear to exacerbate each other’s worst features. The institutions and moral intuitions used to punish those that break the law can hollow out civic participation, distort the electorate, and undermine core democratic values. Likewise, many have argued the decentralized character of democracy is a key, albeit indirect, cause of increasingly punitive public policies that are divorced from any reasonable penological purpose. Given the effects of electoral politics, many ha…Read more
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    This article examines a largely forgotten experiment in prison democracy that took place at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole in 1973, when incarcerated people assumed responsibility for many aspects of institutional governance following a prison officer strike. Drawing on extensive archival materials produced by civilian observers, inmate leaders, and correctional staff, the article reconstructs the politics of inmate participation during this period of self-rule and situate…Read more