The article addresses the widespread use of statistical causal modelling to describe criminal sentencing decision-making empirically in Scandinavia. The article describes the characteristics of this model, and on this basis discusses three aspects of sentencing decision-making that the model does not capture: 1) the role of law and legal structures in sentencing, 2) the processes of constructing law and facts as they occur in the processes of handling criminal cases, and 3) reflecting newer organisational changes to sentencing decision-making. The article argues for a stronger empirically based design of sentencing models and for a more balanced use of different social scientific methodologies and models of sentencing decision-making
Should the punishment fit the criminal as well as the crime? The article argues that idiosyncratic f...
With the largest prison population in the world, the United States relies on incarceration more than...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
Although economists have been actively engaged in research on criminal sentencing, the synergies bet...
This paper studies the institutional structure of criminal sentencing, focusing on the interaction b...
This article attempts to reflect on the success of attempts by academic research to understand and e...
How we should we make sense of sentencing? Despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and ...
The article presents key findings from a recent Norwegian study of penal attitudes in the population...
Legal actors typically decide case by case and rely on their own knowledge and experience to make...
This article contends that it is time to take a critical look at a series of binary categories which...
The thesis is concerned with the penal theories. The general opinion is that it is neoclassicism tha...
Combining the latest work of leading sentencing and punishment scholars from ten different countries...
Lay sentencing attitudes are considered in the light of two theoretical perspectives. The first pers...
The determinants of sentencing are of much interest in criminal justice and legal research. Understa...
Empirical investigations of criminal sentencing represent a vast research enterprise in criminology....
Should the punishment fit the criminal as well as the crime? The article argues that idiosyncratic f...
With the largest prison population in the world, the United States relies on incarceration more than...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
Although economists have been actively engaged in research on criminal sentencing, the synergies bet...
This paper studies the institutional structure of criminal sentencing, focusing on the interaction b...
This article attempts to reflect on the success of attempts by academic research to understand and e...
How we should we make sense of sentencing? Despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and ...
The article presents key findings from a recent Norwegian study of penal attitudes in the population...
Legal actors typically decide case by case and rely on their own knowledge and experience to make...
This article contends that it is time to take a critical look at a series of binary categories which...
The thesis is concerned with the penal theories. The general opinion is that it is neoclassicism tha...
Combining the latest work of leading sentencing and punishment scholars from ten different countries...
Lay sentencing attitudes are considered in the light of two theoretical perspectives. The first pers...
The determinants of sentencing are of much interest in criminal justice and legal research. Understa...
Empirical investigations of criminal sentencing represent a vast research enterprise in criminology....
Should the punishment fit the criminal as well as the crime? The article argues that idiosyncratic f...
With the largest prison population in the world, the United States relies on incarceration more than...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...