From Megan's Law to Jessica's Law, almost every state in the
nation has passed some law to punish sex offenders. This popular
tough-on-crime legislation is often written after highly-publicized
cases have made the gruesome rounds through the media, and usually
features harsh sentences, lifetime GPS monitoring, a dramatic
expansion of the civil commitment procedures, and severe
restrictions on where released sex offenders may live. In Sex
Fiends, Perverts, and Pedophiles, Chrysanthi Leon argues that,
while the singular notion of the sexual boogeyman has been used to
justify these harsh policies, not all sex offenders are the same
and such 'one size fits all' policies can unfairly punish other
offenders of lesser crimes, needlessly targeting, sometimes
ostracizing, citizens from their own communities.
While many recognize that prison is not the right tool for every
crime problem, Leon compellingly argues that the U.S. maintains a
one-size-fits-all approach to sexual offending which is undermining
public safety. Leon explains how we've reached this point--with a
large incarcerated sex offender population, many of whom will be
released in the coming years with multiple barriers to their
success in the community, and without much expertise to guide them
or to guide those who are charged to help them. Leon argues that we
cannot blame the public, nor even the politicians, except
indirectly. Instead, we might blame the institutions we charge with
making placement decisions and with the experts--both those who
have chosen to work in the field and those who have caused its
marginalization. Ultimately, Leon shows that when policies intended
for the worst offenders take over, all of us suffer.
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