Canadian legislation surrounding sentencing has been prefaced by a statement of the purposes and principles of sentencing since 1996. This legislation identifies proportionality as the fundamental principle in sentencing, and states that sentences should be proportional to the gravity of the offence and the degree of responsibility of the offender. Although prior criminal record may be considered as an aggravating factor by the judiciary when deciding upon an appropriate sentence, our current legislation does not mirror other sentencing systems such as those seen in the United States, where a criminal record may at times form the sole basis for the increasing length of incarceration. The Canadian experience with the sentencing of chronic of...
In this article, the author discusses the nature and consequences of the mandatory sentences of impr...
Sentencing involves the deliberate infliction of harm by society on individuals. It is the most coer...
Drawn from a case in which the Supreme Court of Canada grappled with the signal societal trauma wrou...
Canadian legislation surrounding sentencing has been prefaced by a statement of the purposes and pri...
Canadian legislation surrounding sentencing has been prefaced by a statement of the purposes and pri...
This paper analyzes the negative impact that Canada’s criminal records regime has on sentencing judg...
“Who are courts sentencing if not the offender standing in front of them?” The epigraph to this pape...
Part XXIV of the Criminal Code contains a legislative mechanism to detain indefinitely people who ha...
Sentencing in Canada has remained fairly consistent since formalized courts, at both the federal and...
In this article we examine sentencing in 14 Ontario cases of possession of child pornography between...
Sentencing is traditionally regarded as one of the most difficult and challenging functions of the c...
grantor: University of TorontoReform strategies, and sentencing legislation for both adult...
What if I were to tell you that there is a tragedy in its first stages of repetition happening right...
Bill C-41, the Sentencing Reform Act became law on September 3, 1996. The legislation represents the...
Growing numbers of older incarcerated offenders raise a number of challenges for Correctional Servic...
In this article, the author discusses the nature and consequences of the mandatory sentences of impr...
Sentencing involves the deliberate infliction of harm by society on individuals. It is the most coer...
Drawn from a case in which the Supreme Court of Canada grappled with the signal societal trauma wrou...
Canadian legislation surrounding sentencing has been prefaced by a statement of the purposes and pri...
Canadian legislation surrounding sentencing has been prefaced by a statement of the purposes and pri...
This paper analyzes the negative impact that Canada’s criminal records regime has on sentencing judg...
“Who are courts sentencing if not the offender standing in front of them?” The epigraph to this pape...
Part XXIV of the Criminal Code contains a legislative mechanism to detain indefinitely people who ha...
Sentencing in Canada has remained fairly consistent since formalized courts, at both the federal and...
In this article we examine sentencing in 14 Ontario cases of possession of child pornography between...
Sentencing is traditionally regarded as one of the most difficult and challenging functions of the c...
grantor: University of TorontoReform strategies, and sentencing legislation for both adult...
What if I were to tell you that there is a tragedy in its first stages of repetition happening right...
Bill C-41, the Sentencing Reform Act became law on September 3, 1996. The legislation represents the...
Growing numbers of older incarcerated offenders raise a number of challenges for Correctional Servic...
In this article, the author discusses the nature and consequences of the mandatory sentences of impr...
Sentencing involves the deliberate infliction of harm by society on individuals. It is the most coer...
Drawn from a case in which the Supreme Court of Canada grappled with the signal societal trauma wrou...