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April 26, 2024

The ongoing quest to improve our justice system! Find out more!

Former prosecutor Ronald Clark shares with us his experiences of working within the US criminal justice system and describes the changes that have been put in place over the years in an effort to make improvements. An invaluable insight for those interested in law-making and a welcome and positive reminder that, behind the scenes, there are those actively working towards a fairer, more streamlined structure to underpin our legal system.

Roadways to Justice: Reforming the Criminal Justice System by Ronald H Clark

Available on Kindle now!

Amazon US: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CYB1G5MN/
Amazon UK: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CYB1G5MN/

FREE on Kindle Unlimited

America’s criminal justice system is grappling with multiple issues—police-officer involved deaths and violence; mass incarceration; racial, gender and sexual orientation bias; the death penalty; public corruption; juvenile justice; disparate sentencing; and the ill effects of Three Strikes laws. These and other issues are examined through the lens of the author’s experience as both a career prosecutor and educator of prosecutors.

Roadways to Justice tells remarkable stories of selected cases, trials, and, above all else, quests for justice. The book argues that the criminal justice system can be changed, and it offers inspiration, practical solutions and roadmaps for how to reform that system. This volume is ideal for anyone interested in understanding how the criminal justice system really works, and it is an indispensable handbook for the new wave of lawyers, law makers, and others who want to improve it.

Ronald Clark was a career prosecutor in King County, Washington, Senior Training Counsel at the National Advocacy Center in Columbia, South Carolina where state and local prosecutors were trained, and he is currently a Distinguished Practitioner in Residence at Seattle University Law School where he teaches trial advocacy, pretrial advocacy, essential lawyering skills and visual litigation and technology. With an insider’s perspective, Clark reflects on fifty-plus-years of struggles to reform the criminal justice system.