Hello. Welcome to this course on Hot Topics in Criminal Justice. My name is Christopher Slobogin and I'm a professor at Vanderbilt University of Law School. This course about criminal justice should be important to any active of citizen. For one thing, the criminal justice system directly affects a huge percentage of the population. Either as a criminal defendant, a victim or a witness, or as a friend or relative of criminals victims and witnesses. In the United States, during their lives 35 percent of the population would been arrested for a felony and 85 percent will have been the victim of a felony. Almost half for American families have had so many incarcerated. In many other countries percentages are almost as high. Many of you watching have probably been touched by the criminal justice system in some fashion because of this statistics. This course is also important because whether or not you've been affected by crime you can't be a well-informed citizen without understanding the criminal justice system. Crime and criminal justice influence just about everything; politics, the economy, and the social fabric. In most countries, crime and what they do about it are among the top concerns of the system. In the United States, elections have been won or lost because of disagreements over what to do about crime. We spend billions of dollars every year on criminal justice. In many communities, especially communities of color, have lost large segments of their youth to prison. Yet our crime rates are still not going down appreciably. Finally, this course is important because the types of issues we're going to talk about are fascinating in their own right. We're going to talk about why the United States has the dubious distinction of having the Western world's highest incarceration rates. We're also going to talk about ways to deal with offenders other than through prison both in the United States and in other countries. We're going to talk about when, if ever people can be incarcerated for what they might do as opposed to what they've done. About the new things we're learning about the human brain and whether they should affect criminal liability. About the ins and outs of the death penalty and about why it's so hard to avoid convicting innocent people. We'll talk about police use and misuse of deadly force, police stops at pedestrians and cars on the street. In many ways, police are beginning to use technology to conduct surveillance of the population as well as how the law regulates and punishes police misconduct. All of these issues will also require looking at the interaction of race and criminal justice. Now, there are vigorous debates in all of these areas and we're going to dig into all of them. This course should give you a deeper understanding of what is really going on with the criminal justice system. There'll be six lectures or modules and all to this course, covering the following topics. Mass incarceration, punishment prevented detention, insane defense and brain science, the death penalty, police use of force, and police surveillance. Each lecture or module will run between an hour and an hour and 20 minutes and be broken up into four to six 10 to minute parts or lessons. The lectures will take place in front of a small group of students who will often ask questions at the end of each segment. Most of the time I'll be looking at and talking to the students but you'll be able to hear and see everything we do. Before each lecture, you'll be asked to watch from one to three videos on YouTube that will set up the discussion. The lectures themselves will feature PowerPoint slides and you can also be transcriptions of what I say. After each lesson, there'll be either an ungraded practice quiz involving two or three questions or there'll be a discussion forum which will get you debating one another about issues raised by the lecture. At the end of the each of the six lectures, I've suggested readings for my own work which delve more deeply into the material. Additionally, after each lecture you will be asked a thought-provoking question, your answer to which will be graded by your peers. Finally, after you've watched all six lectures, you'll take a graded quiz designed to test your knowledge. I think you'll find this course highly engaging and fun. It may encourage you to get involved in criminal justice reform. At the least, it should get you thinking about the nature of crime and punishment and how government should handle both. I look forward to talking with you.