Predictive Sentencing addresses the role of risk assessment in contemporary sentencing practices. Predictive sentencing has become so deeply ingrained in Western criminal justice decision-making that despite early ethical discussions about selective incapacitation, it currently attracts little critique. Nor has it been subjected to a thorough normative and empirical scrutiny. This is problematic since much current policy and practice concerning risk predictions is inconsistent with mainstream theories of punishment. Moreover, predictive sentencing exacerbates discrimination and disparity in sentencing. Although structured risk assessments may have replaced 'gut feelings', and have now been systematically implemented in Western justice syste...
The question of a criminal defendant’s risk for future offending may be of interest to courts in a v...
There are many areas of the law in which predictions of the potential for violence play a significan...
We thank Peter Reuter and Gary Sweeten for helpful comments and discussion and three anonymous refer...
Predictive Sentencing addresses the role of risk assessment in contemporary sentencing practices. Pr...
Predictive technologies are now used across the criminal justice system to inform risk-based decisio...
At-sentencing risk assessments are predictions of an individual’s statistically likely future crimin...
Sentencing is a backward- and forward-looking enterprise. That is, sentencing is informed by an indi...
Although risk assessment tools have been widely used to inform sentencing decisions, there is uncert...
Recidivism, or the subsequent commission of a criminal offense after receiving punishment in the jus...
A new arena inviting collaboration between the law and sciences has emerged in criminal justice. The...
Although risk assessment tools have been widely used to inform sentencing decisions, there is uncert...
Few ideals have gained greater traction in contemporary discourse than “evidence-based practice. ” ...
Recidivism, or the subsequent commission of a criminal offense after receiving punishment in the jus...
A new arena inviting collaboration between the law and sciences has emerged in criminal justice. The...
Risk assessment — measuring an individual’s potential for offending — has long been an important asp...
The question of a criminal defendant’s risk for future offending may be of interest to courts in a v...
There are many areas of the law in which predictions of the potential for violence play a significan...
We thank Peter Reuter and Gary Sweeten for helpful comments and discussion and three anonymous refer...
Predictive Sentencing addresses the role of risk assessment in contemporary sentencing practices. Pr...
Predictive technologies are now used across the criminal justice system to inform risk-based decisio...
At-sentencing risk assessments are predictions of an individual’s statistically likely future crimin...
Sentencing is a backward- and forward-looking enterprise. That is, sentencing is informed by an indi...
Although risk assessment tools have been widely used to inform sentencing decisions, there is uncert...
Recidivism, or the subsequent commission of a criminal offense after receiving punishment in the jus...
A new arena inviting collaboration between the law and sciences has emerged in criminal justice. The...
Although risk assessment tools have been widely used to inform sentencing decisions, there is uncert...
Few ideals have gained greater traction in contemporary discourse than “evidence-based practice. ” ...
Recidivism, or the subsequent commission of a criminal offense after receiving punishment in the jus...
A new arena inviting collaboration between the law and sciences has emerged in criminal justice. The...
Risk assessment — measuring an individual’s potential for offending — has long been an important asp...
The question of a criminal defendant’s risk for future offending may be of interest to courts in a v...
There are many areas of the law in which predictions of the potential for violence play a significan...
We thank Peter Reuter and Gary Sweeten for helpful comments and discussion and three anonymous refer...