This document is from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law Public Law & Legal Theory Research Paper Series. It examines the globalization of plea bargaining and debates the idea that its spread represents an "Americanization" of criminal procedure. The paper explores how criminal procedures are adapted or "translated" as they spread internationally rather than merely being directly transplanted from one legal system to another.
This document is from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law Public Law & Legal Theory Research Paper Series. It examines the globalization of plea bargaining and debates the idea that its spread represents an "Americanization" of criminal procedure. The paper explores how criminal procedures are adapted or "translated" as they spread internationally rather than merely being directly transplanted from one legal system to another.
This document is from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law Public Law & Legal Theory Research Paper Series. It examines the globalization of plea bargaining and debates the idea that its spread represents an "Americanization" of criminal procedure. The paper explores how criminal procedures are adapted or "translated" as they spread internationally rather than merely being directly transplanted from one legal system to another.