Groundbreaking, engrossing, and authoritative[ Barkow] is standing up for liberty. -- Lincoln Caplan * Harvard Magazine * Lays at the feet of the U.S. Supreme Court the explosion of incarceration that started in the 1970s and continued through the turn of the century, on to today. -- Arthur Rizer * Federalist Society * Makes a strong case that the Framers would have been dismayed by developments such as routine pretrial detention, search and seizure without probable cause, and a plea-bargaining system that has turned the promise of trial by jury into a fantasy. By explaining why these decisions should trouble originalists, Barkow makes it seem at least possible that the Supreme Court might correct some of its mistakes. -- Jacob Sullum * Reason * An intelligent, essential compendium that creates a 360-degree view of the United States crisis of mass incarceration. -- Tina Panik * Library Journal (starred review) * Demonstrate[ s] the consistent inclination of several different groups of Justices to fail to do the job the Court is supposed to do, which is to uphold the Constitution, particularly as various sections of that document relate to mass incarceration. -- Bill Littlefield * Arts Fuse * [ A] fine-grained accountby framing her arguments as genuine originalism, Barkows explicit and laudably practical aim is to help lawyers strategize how to win over todays court. * Publishers Weekly * In Justice Abandoned, Rachel Barkow reveals how the Supreme Courtover six decisions spanning twenty-five yearsslowly and methodically paved the way for mass incarceration. Her precise, powerful analysis proves that each case could, and should, have come out differently. If you want to understand how America came to be the worlds largest jailer, you simply must read this book. -- James Forman, Jr., author of Locking Up Our Own How does the Supreme Court bear responsibility for mass incarceration? Rachel Barkow lays out the crucial wrong turns the Court has taken. Justice Abandoned is learned and accessibleand full of ideas for how the law could and should change. -- Emily Bazelon, author of Charged Rachel Barkow delivers an insightful and meticulously researched retelling of six Supreme Court cases that shaped the US incarceration system as we know it today. Her work highlights a history we should all confront if we are to right the wrongs of our past and reform the status quowhich, as she demonstrates, was brought about as much by the Supreme Court as by political actors. -- Preet Bharara, author of Doing Justice Most people, whether concerned citizens or specialists, think that mass incarceration is the result of bad policies, overreaching police and prosecutors, and structural racism. Justice Abandoned shows that the Supreme Court is also to blame for repeatedly failing to stand up for individual liberty in the face of government claims that public safety requires suppressing rights. Writing with clarity and verve, the brilliant Rachel Barkow unpacks six dramatic moments when the Court got it wrong and enabled the imprisonment of millions of people who would not face incarceration in any other liberal democracy on earth. -- Noah Feldman, author of Scorpions