grantor: University of TorontoReform strategies, and sentencing legislation for both adults and youth in Canada and elsewhere have attempted to create 'intermediate' sanctions that can be made equivalent and interchangeable with sentences of imprisonment. These sanctions may have the potential to reduce the use of imprisonment through interchangeability, so long as sanctions can be equivalent to imprisonment in severity. Implicit in these theories of punishment, however, is the assumption of the acceptability of interchangeable, 'intermediate' sanctions. It is assumed that the most critical dimension to punishment is severity. This thesis challenges these simplistic conceptualizations of punishment, and presents an analysis of the...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
What would a jurisprudence of sentencing that was induced from the experience of punishment, rather ...
grantor: University of TorontoReform strategies, and sentencing legislation for both adult...
Authors have pointed to multiple dimensions of crime and punishment, and in particu-lar, the need to...
In England and Wales, ‘punishment’ is a central element of criminal justice. What punishment entails...
Sentencing involves the deliberate infliction of harm by society on individuals. It is the most coer...
In England and Wales, ‘punishment’ is a central element of criminal justice. What punishment entails...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
Imprisonment is the punishment of choice in American jurisdictions. In everyday life, the modes of h...
I shall argue that advocates of denunciatory forms of expressivism can make a good case for restrict...
Punishing the innocent is incontestably repugnant. Punishing offenders more harshly than is justifie...
Sentencing is traditionally regarded as one of the most difficult and challenging functions of the c...
Philosophers' attempts to justify punishment have focused on a wide range of features that paradigma...
Sentencing in Canada has remained fairly consistent since formalized courts, at both the federal and...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
What would a jurisprudence of sentencing that was induced from the experience of punishment, rather ...
grantor: University of TorontoReform strategies, and sentencing legislation for both adult...
Authors have pointed to multiple dimensions of crime and punishment, and in particu-lar, the need to...
In England and Wales, ‘punishment’ is a central element of criminal justice. What punishment entails...
Sentencing involves the deliberate infliction of harm by society on individuals. It is the most coer...
In England and Wales, ‘punishment’ is a central element of criminal justice. What punishment entails...
grantor: University of TorontoOver the past 25 years public opinion polls in Canada, the U...
Imprisonment is the punishment of choice in American jurisdictions. In everyday life, the modes of h...
I shall argue that advocates of denunciatory forms of expressivism can make a good case for restrict...
Punishing the innocent is incontestably repugnant. Punishing offenders more harshly than is justifie...
Sentencing is traditionally regarded as one of the most difficult and challenging functions of the c...
Philosophers' attempts to justify punishment have focused on a wide range of features that paradigma...
Sentencing in Canada has remained fairly consistent since formalized courts, at both the federal and...
The concept of harm and the nature of its proper role in the criminal law has challenged legislators...
A lively debate began in the late 1970\u27s on the topic of criminal sentencing. A major attack was ...
What would a jurisprudence of sentencing that was induced from the experience of punishment, rather ...