The new Draft Guidelines for Organizational Defendants released by the U.S. Sentencing Commission on October 25, 1990, explicitly adopt a \u27carrot and stick\u27 approach to sentencing. While the boldly instrumental use made of sentencing penalties and credits in these guidelines will trouble some, the larger question is whether the Commission\u27s social engineering will work. Two issues stand out: First, is the Commission\u27s carrot mightier than its stick? At first glance, this may seem a surprising question because the stick in the Commission\u27s guidelines seemingly packs a Ruthian wallop: fines under the draft guidelines are based on a multiple of the greater of (a) the pecuniary gain to the defendant, (b) the pecuniary loss ...
Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indetermina...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
The federal sentencing guidelines have received sustained criticism from scholars, judges, and pract...
The new Draft Guidelines for Organizational Defendants released by the U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
In 1987, the United States Sentencing Commission took what was supposed to be the first step in an ...
This paper proposes the building blocks towards a general theory on the optimal use of carrots and s...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
While carrots and sticks create in principle identical marginal incentives, they are not randomly us...
Part I of this Article provides a brief overview of the Guidelines and discusses how they define and...
Sentencing commissions, administrative agencies charged to develop and promulgate standards for sent...
The first Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizational Defendants ( Guidelines ) became effecti...
This paper studies the institutional structure of criminal sentencing, focusing on the interaction b...
Deciding how much time a person should spend in prison for a serious crime is an inherently moral an...
This Article explains how the federal organizational sentencing guidelines work and how they have cr...
Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indetermina...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
The federal sentencing guidelines have received sustained criticism from scholars, judges, and pract...
The new Draft Guidelines for Organizational Defendants released by the U.S. Sentencing Commission ...
In this article, Professor O\u27Sullivan, who served as the reporter for the U.S. Sentencing Commiss...
In 1987, the United States Sentencing Commission took what was supposed to be the first step in an ...
This paper proposes the building blocks towards a general theory on the optimal use of carrots and s...
This Article traces the Sentencing Commission\u27s path in completing that task32 and considers what...
While carrots and sticks create in principle identical marginal incentives, they are not randomly us...
Part I of this Article provides a brief overview of the Guidelines and discusses how they define and...
Sentencing commissions, administrative agencies charged to develop and promulgate standards for sent...
The first Federal Sentencing Guidelines for Organizational Defendants ( Guidelines ) became effecti...
This paper studies the institutional structure of criminal sentencing, focusing on the interaction b...
Deciding how much time a person should spend in prison for a serious crime is an inherently moral an...
This Article explains how the federal organizational sentencing guidelines work and how they have cr...
Since 1986, the country has been witness to a revolution in federal sentencing practice: indetermina...
Essentially, what is wrong with the Guidelines is that they are rules without -without rationality,...
The federal sentencing guidelines have received sustained criticism from scholars, judges, and pract...