In 1965, alongside the abolition of capital punishment, a mandatory life sentence for murder was implemented in England and Wales. The mandatory life sentence served as a signal to the public that the criminal justice system would still implement the most severe sanction of life imprisonment in cases of murder. Nearly 50 years later, this article examines whether the imposition of a mandatory life sentence for murder is still in the best interests of justice or whether English homicide law would be better served by a discretionary sentencing system. In doing so, the article considers debates surrounding the political and public need for a mandatory life sentence for murder by drawing upon interviews conducted with 29 members of the English ...
This thesis examines the origins of Schedule 21 and the intention behind it by making detailed recou...
Capital punishment (sometimes referred to as the death penalty) is the carrying out of a legal sente...
This article addresses the effect of judge versus jury decision making through analysis of a databas...
It is common knowledge that the sentence for murder is life.1 But while the symbolism – of a life co...
Examines the changes to the release procedures for mandatory life prisoners in England and Wales ove...
In 1965, it was thought that nothing less than a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment would be an...
The authors take a closer look at the current sentencing laws for murder and argue the need to chang...
One of the “law jobs” of the law of murder is to regulate the level of “penal heat” produced in soci...
ABSTRACT. Theauthorstakeacloserlookatthecurrentsentencinglawsformurder and argue the need to change ...
Since the abolition of the death penalty, life imprisonment in England and Wales has had a literal m...
This Note explores the differences between the American legal system’s sentencing procedures for mur...
This Note analyzes the relevant Supreme Court death penalty decisions from 1972 to 1985 in order to ...
The sentence of life imprisonment is universally either the maximum or mandatory penalty for the cri...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
Capital punishment for murder was abolished in Britain in 1965. At this time, the way people in Brit...
This thesis examines the origins of Schedule 21 and the intention behind it by making detailed recou...
Capital punishment (sometimes referred to as the death penalty) is the carrying out of a legal sente...
This article addresses the effect of judge versus jury decision making through analysis of a databas...
It is common knowledge that the sentence for murder is life.1 But while the symbolism – of a life co...
Examines the changes to the release procedures for mandatory life prisoners in England and Wales ove...
In 1965, it was thought that nothing less than a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment would be an...
The authors take a closer look at the current sentencing laws for murder and argue the need to chang...
One of the “law jobs” of the law of murder is to regulate the level of “penal heat” produced in soci...
ABSTRACT. Theauthorstakeacloserlookatthecurrentsentencinglawsformurder and argue the need to change ...
Since the abolition of the death penalty, life imprisonment in England and Wales has had a literal m...
This Note explores the differences between the American legal system’s sentencing procedures for mur...
This Note analyzes the relevant Supreme Court death penalty decisions from 1972 to 1985 in order to ...
The sentence of life imprisonment is universally either the maximum or mandatory penalty for the cri...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
Capital punishment for murder was abolished in Britain in 1965. At this time, the way people in Brit...
This thesis examines the origins of Schedule 21 and the intention behind it by making detailed recou...
Capital punishment (sometimes referred to as the death penalty) is the carrying out of a legal sente...
This article addresses the effect of judge versus jury decision making through analysis of a databas...