Scholarly Article Discussion

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Listofreferences.docx

List of References

Amanda K. Packel. (2002). Juvenile Justice and the Punishment of Recidivists under California’s Three Strikes Law. California Law Review, 90(4), 1157. https://doi-org.ezproxy.fiu.edu/10.2307/3481327

Arleen, J. (1995). California Three-Strikes Law Gobbling Up Jurors. ABA Journal, 81(12), 29.

Boyd, R. (2014). Narratives of Sacrificial Expulsion in the Supreme Court’s Affirmation of California’s “Three Strikes and You’re Out” Law. Legal Communication & Rhetoric: JALWD, 11, 83–108.

Datta, Anusua. “California’s Three Strikes Law Revisited: Assessing the Long-Term Effects of the Law.” Atlantic Economic Journal, vol. 45, no. 2, June 2017, pp. 225–249. EBSCOhost, doi:10.1007/s11293-017-9544-8.

Heyer, C. F. (2012). Comparing the Strike Zones of “Three Strikes and You’re Out” Laws for California and Georgia, the Nation’s Two Heaviest Hitters. Suffolk University Law Review, 45(4), 1217.

Lorelei Laird. (2013). After Third Strike, Many Now Walk: California begins to release prisoners after reforming its three-strikes law. ABA Journal, 99(12), 13.

Orlando, K. (2015). People v. Nguyen: a modern look at the use of juvenile adjudications as strike offenses under the Three Strikes Law. Santa Clara Law Review, 4, 917.

Ramirez, J. R., & Crano, W. D. (2003). Deterrence and incapacitation: an interrupted ime-series analysis of California’s three-strikes law. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1, 110.

Richard C. Reuben. (1995). Get-tough Stance Draws Fiscal Criticism: California’s three-strikes law could cost $5.5 billion annually, RAND study says. ABA Journal, 81(1), 16.

Tom R. Tyler, & Robert J. Boeckmann. (1997). Three Strikes and You Are Out, but Why? The Psychology of Public Support for Punishing Rule Breakers. Law & Society Review, 31(2), 237. https://doi-org.ezproxy.fiu.edu/10.2307/3053926