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Rafael A. Mangual Subscribe

Rafael A. Mangual is a fellow and deputy director of legal policy at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, and a contributing editor to City Journal.

March 18, 2020|

With Good Reason, Indeed

by Rafael A. Mangual|

In response to: An Incarceration Nation?

Prison inmates listen during discussions with U.S. President Barack Obama at El Reno Federal Correctional Institution July 16, 2015 in El Reno, Oklahoma. Image: White House Photo / Alamy Stock Photo.
The best way to explain why we incarcerate so much is to explore what would happen if we didn’t.

More Responses

Mass Incarceration Is in the Eye of the Beholder

by Clark Neily

Our system has become utterly cavalier in its use of the criminal sanction.

The Undeniable Reality of Mass Incarceration in America

by Stephen F. Smith

We do imprison too many, and Latzer unduly minimizes the breathtaking severity of America’s criminal justice system.

Do Plea Bargains and Jail Stays Contribute to Mass Incarceration?

by Barry Latzer

Debates should continue about root causes, but attacking incarceration is not the right way forward.

Book Reviews

A Mirror of the 20th-Century Congress

by Joseph Postell

Wright undermined the very basis of his local popularity—the decentralized nature of the House—by supporting reforms that gave power to the party leaders.

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The Graces of Flannery O'Connor

by Henry T. Edmondson III

O'Connor's correspondence is a goldmine of piercing insight and startling reflections on everything from literature to philosophy to raising peacocks.

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Liberty Classics

Rereading Politica in the Post-Liberal Moment

by Glenn A. Moots

Althusius offers a rich constitutionalism that empowers persons to thrive alongside one another in deliberate communities.

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James Fenimore Cooper and the American Experiment

by Melissa Matthes

In The American Democrat, James Fenimore Cooper defended democracy against both mob rule and majority tyranny.

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Podcasts

Stuck With Decadence

A discussion with Ross Douthat

Ross Douthat discusses with Richard Reinsch his new book The Decadent Society.

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Can the Postmodern Natural Law Remedy Our Failing Humanism?

A discussion with Graham McAleer

Graham McAleer discusses how postmodern natural law can help us think more coherently about human beings and our actions.

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Did the Civil Rights Constitution Distort American Politics?

A discussion with Christopher Caldwell

Christopher Caldwell discusses his new book, The Age of Entitlement.

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America, Land of Deformed Institutions

A discussion with Yuval Levin

Yuval Levin pinpoints that American alienation and anger emerges from our weak political, social, and religious institutions.

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