
New Books Network David Garland, "Law and Order Leviathan: America’s Extraordinary Regime of Policing and Punishment" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Nov 14, 2025
David Garland, Arthur T. Vanderbilt Professor of Law at NYU, dives into America's unique policing and punishment landscape. He discusses how post-1960s capitalism has fueled violence and social breakdown, leading to aggressive law enforcement responses. Garland links Tocqueville's paradox to America's punitive system, highlighting the law-and-order covenant between voters and government. He explores the impact of racism, poverty, and class on crime, and emphasizes the need for structural economic reforms to challenge the punitive status quo while suggesting practical steps to mitigate police violence.
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Liberty Paired With Exceptional Punishment
- The U.S. combines expansive civic liberty with unusually harsh penal practice, creating an apparent paradox.
The Law-And-Order Electoral Compact
- Voters repeatedly backed law-and-order candidates because extreme violent crime created acute public insecurity.
Why U.S. Lethal Violence Is So High
- High U.S. homicide rates stem from historical private violence, pervasive guns, and concentrated neighborhood poverty.






