Crime, Corrections, and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Responses and Adaptations in the U.S. Criminal Justice System
Joseph A Schafer editor Breanne Pleggenkuhle editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
Published:29th Jul '25
£68.00
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- Paperback£20.99(9780809339693)

Analyses of crime and justice in an unprecedented time
While COVID-19 lockdowns affected nearly everyone worldwide, feelings of anxiety and fear were exacerbated for those already entangled in the criminal justice system. Scholars recognized the unique opportunity to study crime and the justice system’s response during this period, though they soon realized that determining the pandemic’s effects would be a complicated, nuanced process.
Crime, Corrections, and the COVID-19 Pandemic features analyses and findings from more than thirty contributors in eleven essays. The collection examines the multifaceted social, economic, cultural, legislative, and policy responses to COVID-19 and their impacts on crime and justice. It also explores how professionals across the criminal justice system—police officers, campus police officers, attorneys, judges, correctional staff, and community supervision agents—adapted to unprecedented challenges.
The book provides real-world evidence of how unconventional solutions and groundbreaking practices were implemented in response to a global crisis. Contributors analyze how incarcerated individuals, their families, and their supervisors dealt with the fear of transmission, medical care, and death. Their findings, which are necessarily dependent on timing, place, measurement, and operationalization, include both change and stasis, both negative and positive outcomes. For instance, while minor and property-related offenses initially declined, violent crimes like homicide and intimate partner violence increased. Drug usage patterns changed, leading to a rise in opioid overdoses, and despite the rise in digital interactions, there was no significant difference in self-reported cybervictimization. Furthermore, rates of gang-related crimes did not decrease. Policy and public health responses reshaped criminal activities, influencing the methods and motivations behind theft, child and elder abuse, and other offenses. This volume includes in-depth examinations of certain often-overlooked crimes, such as labor trafficking, and provides direct insights into the job challenges faced by criminal justice professionals, from probation personnel to labor rights advocates.
Emerging innovations in health risk management within correctional facilities led to increased awareness and focus on specific types of crime. Responses to the pandemic revealed significant challenges, such as burnout among justice system personnel, difficulties in adapting and innovating, and challenges in providing services to vulnerable populations.
Through diverse perspectives and empirical approaches ranging from advanced statistical analysis to qualitative interviews, Crime, Corrections, and the COVID-19 Pandemic offers a comprehensive...
“The scholars featured in this book are internationally known for their work, creating a fantastic text for use in an academic or practitioner setting that examines the subtle and drastic changes in the criminal justice system as a result of COVID.”—Catherine D. Marcum, professor of justice studies, Appalachian State University
“This book uncovers how the COVID-19 pandemic became a pivotal moment for crime and justice in the United States, offering a nuanced analysis that defies traditional thinking. Each chapter dives into the unexpected ways the crisis influenced criminal behavior, policing, courts, and corrections. Crime, Corrections, and the COVID-19 Pandemic is a must-read for those interested in how a global emergency can alter the very foundations of society, sparking new conversations and innovations in a transformative period in criminology and criminal justice.”—Jennifer H. Peck, editor of Race and Ethnicity in the Juvenile and Criminal Justice Systems: Contemporary Issues of Offending Behavior and Judicial Responses
“In this edited volume, Pleggenkuhle and Schafer assemble top scholars to contribute essential new knowledge on how COVID-19 has influenced crime, policing, courts, correction, and victim services. This is a valuable book for anyone looking to study and learn about the criminal justice system since the coronavirus pandemic.”—Chad Posick, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Georgia Southern University
“This collection provides a comprehensive examination of how victimization, crime, and crime processing shifted during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the dual roles of technology in both facilitation of and response to crime. Because the text offers insight into crime trends, victims, and workers in the criminal legal system, it is suitable across the curriculum.”—Dawn Beichner-Thomas, coeditor of Distraction: Girls, School, and Sexuality
ISBN: 9780809339709
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 485g
296 pages