In 1965, it was thought that nothing less than a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment would be an acceptable replacement for the death penalty for murder in England and Wales. It was assumed that anything else would have led to a significant loss of public confidence in the criminal justice system. The authors have recently conducted what is believed to be the first survey in this country that tests this assumption, as well as the extent of public knowledge and belief of the current system for sentencing convicted murderers. The survey casts doubt over the assumption and highlights the misunderstanding and lack of knowledge on which public opinion is based. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Centre f...
In May survey Centre for Public Opinion Research SOÚ AV ČR, v.v.i., asked respondents about their at...
Public attitudes to sanctioning reflect a general assumption what governmental reaction is justified...
International audienceSurveys indicate that between 70% and 80% of people consider judges to be too ...
In 1965, alongside the abolition of capital punishment, a mandatory life sentence for murder was imp...
The authors take a closer look at the current sentencing laws for murder and argue the need to chang...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
There is a relatively long tradition by legal scholars of gauging public perceptions about sentencin...
The death penalty remains a controversial issue in Japan. While Japan has been a signatory to the In...
During much of the second half of the twentieth century, public opinion in both the United States an...
During the 1970s penal philosophy moved toward what has become known as the Neo-Classical Revival. T...
A 2008 Gallup poll places public support for the death penalty at 64 percent. Stemming from an obser...
During much of the second half of the twentieth century, public opinion in both the United States an...
Examines the changes to the release procedures for mandatory life prisoners in England and Wales ove...
The current study sought to assess the extent to which residents of different jurisdictions agree as...
The Victorian Sentencing Advisory Council (Freiberg, this volume; McCarthy, this volume) has, as one...
In May survey Centre for Public Opinion Research SOÚ AV ČR, v.v.i., asked respondents about their at...
Public attitudes to sanctioning reflect a general assumption what governmental reaction is justified...
International audienceSurveys indicate that between 70% and 80% of people consider judges to be too ...
In 1965, alongside the abolition of capital punishment, a mandatory life sentence for murder was imp...
The authors take a closer look at the current sentencing laws for murder and argue the need to chang...
PERSONS arguing for and against changing legal codes and the penal system often refer to the state o...
There is a relatively long tradition by legal scholars of gauging public perceptions about sentencin...
The death penalty remains a controversial issue in Japan. While Japan has been a signatory to the In...
During much of the second half of the twentieth century, public opinion in both the United States an...
During the 1970s penal philosophy moved toward what has become known as the Neo-Classical Revival. T...
A 2008 Gallup poll places public support for the death penalty at 64 percent. Stemming from an obser...
During much of the second half of the twentieth century, public opinion in both the United States an...
Examines the changes to the release procedures for mandatory life prisoners in England and Wales ove...
The current study sought to assess the extent to which residents of different jurisdictions agree as...
The Victorian Sentencing Advisory Council (Freiberg, this volume; McCarthy, this volume) has, as one...
In May survey Centre for Public Opinion Research SOÚ AV ČR, v.v.i., asked respondents about their at...
Public attitudes to sanctioning reflect a general assumption what governmental reaction is justified...
International audienceSurveys indicate that between 70% and 80% of people consider judges to be too ...