Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, with differences between judges generally ignored. This is largely due to the limitations in official data. Using text mining techniques from Crown Court sentence records available online we generate a sample of 7,212 violent and sexual offences where both court and judge are captured. Multilevel time-to-event analyses of sentence length demonstrate that most disparities originate at the judge, not the court-level. Two important implications follow: i) the extent of sentencing consistency in England and Wales has been underestimated; and ii) the importance attributed to the location in which sentences are passed – in England and Wales and elsewh...
Sentence severity has increased in England and Wales in recent years. The causes of the increase rem...
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Dispariti...
This thesis examines the consistency of sentencing between the circuits of the New Zealand District ...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
Empirical research has repeatedly focused on the potential existence of sentencing disparities. In p...
Empirical research has repeatedly focused on the potential existence of sentencing disparities. In p...
Objectives: The development and application of methods to assess consistency in sentencing before an...
This article investigates the presence of unwarranted between court disparities in England and Wales...
Most research in sentencing discrimination in the United Kingdom has relied on aggregate analyses co...
While there is widespread evidence that sentences for similar cases tend to differ across courts, th...
Criminal sentencing is a complex cognitive activity often performed by the unaided mind under subopt...
The English summer riots of 2011 resulted in the criminal justice system having to process an unprec...
Sentence severity has increased in England and Wales in recent years. The causes of the increase re...
Sentencing in England and Wales has evolved in a direction apart from other common law countries. Al...
Sentence severity has increased in England and Wales in recent years. The causes of the increase rem...
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Dispariti...
This thesis examines the consistency of sentencing between the circuits of the New Zealand District ...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
Research on sentence consistency in England and Wales has focused on disparities between courts, wit...
Empirical research has repeatedly focused on the potential existence of sentencing disparities. In p...
Empirical research has repeatedly focused on the potential existence of sentencing disparities. In p...
Objectives: The development and application of methods to assess consistency in sentencing before an...
This article investigates the presence of unwarranted between court disparities in England and Wales...
Most research in sentencing discrimination in the United Kingdom has relied on aggregate analyses co...
While there is widespread evidence that sentences for similar cases tend to differ across courts, th...
Criminal sentencing is a complex cognitive activity often performed by the unaided mind under subopt...
The English summer riots of 2011 resulted in the criminal justice system having to process an unprec...
Sentence severity has increased in England and Wales in recent years. The causes of the increase re...
Sentencing in England and Wales has evolved in a direction apart from other common law countries. Al...
Sentence severity has increased in England and Wales in recent years. The causes of the increase rem...
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Dispariti...
This thesis examines the consistency of sentencing between the circuits of the New Zealand District ...