Sentencing is widely viewed as an objective and scientific exercise, whilst emotions have long been regarded as a danger to the rationality of the legal realm. For that reason, emotions have traditionally been kept at arm’s length from the sentencing exercise. However, the last two decades have witnessed something of an ‘emotionalisation’ of law and criminal justice. It is now widely contended that emotions may enrich our justice system through bolstering therapeutic jurisprudence, procedural justice, through the quality of decision-making and may even transform relationships between victims and offenders. A number of mechanisms have been developed in recent years which provide victims and offenders with limited means to express th...