At least since Caesare Beccaria’s time, critics have attacked the power of a sovereign or head of state to pardon or reduce the punishment of people convicted of crimes. They charge that clemency diminishes the certainty of punishment and places the ruler outside of the rule of law. Carolyn Strange’s general theme is this quest for certainty in criminal justice and retention of discretionary punishment. Certainty of punishment within the rule of law was a major principle of Enlightenment thou..
This Article explains and defends a “second-best” theory of pardons. Pardons are second-best in two ...
Clemency is an extrajudicial measure intended both to enhance fairness in the administration of just...
Classical penology was conceived in France in the eighteenth century, and then eclipsed all over the...
Historians of early-modern England and British colonies have productively applied Douglas Hay’s germ...
The pardon is an act of mercy, tied to the divine right of kings. Why did New York retain this mode...
At the state level, the power to pardon or commute a criminal sentence — that is, to grant clemency ...
The pardon power, often described as a safety valve on the criminal justice system, is in a state of...
This Article argues for transparency in the clemency process and contends that the concept of clemen...
The idea of the last-minute reprieve granted by a distant, unknowable dispenser of mercy to a man co...
Pardon powers are common but difficult to justify. A pardon power is, roughly, a power that is (a) p...
At the state and federal levels, the pardon power can be used to restore the dignity and legal right...
This Article shows how the pardon power has been corrupted over the past forty years. It begins with...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
This article examines the reasons offered by seven New York governors in justification of their deci...
This chapter presents an authoritative overview of punishment, with particular emphasis on the limit...
This Article explains and defends a “second-best” theory of pardons. Pardons are second-best in two ...
Clemency is an extrajudicial measure intended both to enhance fairness in the administration of just...
Classical penology was conceived in France in the eighteenth century, and then eclipsed all over the...
Historians of early-modern England and British colonies have productively applied Douglas Hay’s germ...
The pardon is an act of mercy, tied to the divine right of kings. Why did New York retain this mode...
At the state level, the power to pardon or commute a criminal sentence — that is, to grant clemency ...
The pardon power, often described as a safety valve on the criminal justice system, is in a state of...
This Article argues for transparency in the clemency process and contends that the concept of clemen...
The idea of the last-minute reprieve granted by a distant, unknowable dispenser of mercy to a man co...
Pardon powers are common but difficult to justify. A pardon power is, roughly, a power that is (a) p...
At the state and federal levels, the pardon power can be used to restore the dignity and legal right...
This Article shows how the pardon power has been corrupted over the past forty years. It begins with...
Over twenty years ago, the United States Supreme Court held that both mandatory capital sentencing s...
This article examines the reasons offered by seven New York governors in justification of their deci...
This chapter presents an authoritative overview of punishment, with particular emphasis on the limit...
This Article explains and defends a “second-best” theory of pardons. Pardons are second-best in two ...
Clemency is an extrajudicial measure intended both to enhance fairness in the administration of just...
Classical penology was conceived in France in the eighteenth century, and then eclipsed all over the...