Prior sentencing research has largely ignored the military justice system even though over two million people are subject to its jurisdiction. Studying the military justice system advances knowledge of the military population and offers an opportunity to explore criminal justice issues and theoretical perspectives in a different legal system that includes jury sentencing. The present study applies organizational efficiency, uncertainty avoidance, and court community perspectives to investigate whether military offenders who assert their Sixth Amendment right to a jury trial are penalized with harsher sentences than offenders who plead guilty. Using Air Force court-martial data from 2005 and 2006, the results of the study found no support fo...
Military national security courts-martial infrequently occur. When they do occur, military counsel, ...
After a century of reform and experimentation, sentencing remains a highly contested area of the cri...
Most participants in the criminal judicial process have had notions of diversities between the sente...
There is often a misconception regarding the military and the procedures that it uses in order to br...
This article starts with a sketch of the military justice system to orient readers. Understanding th...
During court-martial, the commander decides on the charge, selects of the jury, and reviews the tria...
In 1984, the U.S. Armed Forces amended its capital punishment system for death eligible murder to br...
In 1950 military justice changed drastically with the enactment of the Uniform Code of Military Just...
The American jury, once heralded as “the great corrective of law in its actual administration,” has ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
In these last few years, we have seen public interest in military justice develop far beyond an imme...
Military justice serves a different purpose than civilian justice and its form reflects that distict...
Jury sentencing in non-capital cases is one of the least understood procedures in contemporary Ameri...
This research investigated the effectiveness of jury sentencing recommendations using elements of pr...
In Burch . Louisiana and Ballew v. Georgia, the Supreme Court defined the protections guaranteed by ...
Military national security courts-martial infrequently occur. When they do occur, military counsel, ...
After a century of reform and experimentation, sentencing remains a highly contested area of the cri...
Most participants in the criminal judicial process have had notions of diversities between the sente...
There is often a misconception regarding the military and the procedures that it uses in order to br...
This article starts with a sketch of the military justice system to orient readers. Understanding th...
During court-martial, the commander decides on the charge, selects of the jury, and reviews the tria...
In 1984, the U.S. Armed Forces amended its capital punishment system for death eligible murder to br...
In 1950 military justice changed drastically with the enactment of the Uniform Code of Military Just...
The American jury, once heralded as “the great corrective of law in its actual administration,” has ...
The research reported in this Essay examines process discounts-differences in sentences imposed for ...
In these last few years, we have seen public interest in military justice develop far beyond an imme...
Military justice serves a different purpose than civilian justice and its form reflects that distict...
Jury sentencing in non-capital cases is one of the least understood procedures in contemporary Ameri...
This research investigated the effectiveness of jury sentencing recommendations using elements of pr...
In Burch . Louisiana and Ballew v. Georgia, the Supreme Court defined the protections guaranteed by ...
Military national security courts-martial infrequently occur. When they do occur, military counsel, ...
After a century of reform and experimentation, sentencing remains a highly contested area of the cri...
Most participants in the criminal judicial process have had notions of diversities between the sente...