@article{Doyle_2020, title={Innocence and Prevention: Could we Build Justice Safety Centers?}, volume={1}, url={https://wclawr.org/index.php/wclr/article/view/19}, DOI={10.29173/wclawr19}, abstractNote={<p>Some contemporary writers argue that wrongful convictions represent system failures in a complex criminal justice system.  Currently explorations are underway into whether pursuit of non-blaming, all-stakeholders, forward-looking “sentinel event” reviews focused on lowering risk rather than laying blame can improve safety from wrongful convictions.  This article reviews the underlying theory of safety-based practices and sketches one model of how work on preventing wrongful convictions might be institutionalized:  made a part of a new culture of continuous improvement that lowers the risk of future wrongful convictions and offers a degree of restorative justice to the victims of errors.</p>}, number={2}, journal={The Wrongful Conviction Law Review}, author={Doyle, James}, year={2020}, month={Sep.}, pages={253–269} }