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Bundle: Criminal Law and the American Penal System: Cases and Context, First Edition and PracticePerfect

Authors
  • Andrew Manuel Crespo
  • John Rappaport
  • LaJuana S Davis
  • Dionne Gonder-Stanley
  • Bridgette Baldwin
Series / Aspen Bundle Series
Description

Print + Digital Bundle - This bundle includes both print and digital versions of ISBN 9781543835106 as well as PracticePerfect, ISBN 9798886145441.

Digital Bundle - This bundle includes a digital-only version of ISBN 9798894101842 as well as PracticePerfect, ISBN 9798886145441.

More about Criminal Law and the American Penal System: Cases and Context, First Edition:This exciting new casebook by Andrew Crespo and John Rappaport encourages students to see how criminal law shapes prosecutorial and police power—and how it is both shaped by and reconstitutes hierarchies of race, class, and gender. 


Bundle also includes PracticePerfect: Criminal Law, a visually engaging, interactive study aid designed to help students review core course topics and test their ability to recall and correctly apply the law. PracticePerfect contains a library of animated videos that explain course topics through hypothetical situations, quizzes to test knowledge and understanding, and progress trackers so students can identify their strengths and weaknesses in the course. Designed to work with all major casebooks, PracticePerfect is the ideal study companion for today's law students.


 

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About the authors
Andrew Manuel Crespo
Morris Wasserstein Public Interest Professor of Law, Executive Faculty Director, Institute to End Mass Incarceration

Andrew Manuel Crespo is the Morris Wasserstein Public Interest Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, where he teaches criminal law and procedure and serves as the Executive Faculty Director of the Institute to End Mass Incarceration. Professor Crespo’s research and scholarly expertise center on the institutional design, legal frameworks, and power structures of the American penal system, and on the relationship between lawyers, organizers, and social movement actors in effecting transformational change. His scholarship has been honored by the Association of American Law Schools and profiled in The New York Times, with his leading articles appearing in the Harvard Law Review, the Columbia Law Review, and the Yale Law Journal. Together with John Rappaport, he is the author of Criminal Law and the American Penal System, an innovative forthcoming casebook that recasts the traditionally required criminal law course as a class about the role law and lawyers have played in building and sustaining American mass incarceration.

Nationally recognized for his expertise on a range of legal issues, Professor Crespo’s public commentary can be found in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and online at Lawfare, Just Security, Take Care, and Inquest, where he is a founding editor and Co-Editor in Chief. A publicly engaged academic, he regularly shares legal analyses and commentary in print, on television, and on the radio, with appearances on CNN, NPR’s On Point and All Things Considered, and NBC’s Meet the Press.

Through his leadership of the Institute to End Mass Incarceration, Professor Crespo works to develop modes of legal practice that integrate lawyers effectively and responsibly into organizer-led anti-carceral campaigns and movements. Related to that work, he serves as Chair of the Board of Directors of the Leading Change Network, an international nonprofit dedicated to teaching community organizing and to supporting organizers working to build more just and democratic societies across the globe. Professor Crespo also serves on the Academic Advisory Board of the American Constitution Society, the Board of Trustees of the Harvard Law Review Association, the Standing Advisory Committee on the Rules of Criminal Procedure for the state of Massachusetts, and as an elected member of the American Law Institute. In 2021, at the appointment of President Biden, he served as a Commissioner on the Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States. Prior to beginning his academic career, Professor Crespo served as a Staff Attorney with the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia, where he represented over one hundred adults and juveniles charged with serious felonies, ranging from armed robberies, to burglaries, to homicides. As a member of the Harvard Law School faculty he continues to be active in litigation, authoring merits stage and amicus briefs on various issues, often in close collaboration with his students. Professor Crespo graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 2008, where he served as president of the Harvard Law Review, the first Latino to hold that position. Following law school, Professor Crespo served for three years as a law clerk, initially to Judge Stephen Reinhardt of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, then to Associate Justice Stephen Breyer of the U.S. Supreme Court, and finally to Associate Justice Elena Kagan during her inaugural term on the Court. Following his time as a public defender, Professor Crespo returned to Harvard as an assistant professor of law in 2015. In 2019, he became the first Latino promoted to a tenured position on the law school’s faculty.

John Rappaport
Professor of Law

John Rappaport teaches and writes about criminal law, criminal procedure, and the criminal justice system. Most of his current research concerns American law enforcement, with topics including collective bargaining, unionization, and the labor market for law enforcement officers.

John graduated magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 2006. He clerked for Judges Stephen Reinhardt and Paul Watford of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg of the US Supreme Court. He also practiced in the Capital Habeas Unit of the Los Angeles Federal Public Defender’s office and as a litigator at Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP. He studied mathematics as an undergraduate, earning his degree with distinction from Stanford University. Before joining the faculty, John taught at the Law School as a Bigelow Fellow and Lecturer in Law.

Product Information
Publication date
2025-10-15
Copyright Year
2025
Pages
1200
Bundle: Print + eBook + Video Learning
9798899638299
Bundle: eBook + Video Learning
9798899638305
Subject
Criminal Law
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