The Court of Appeal in the case of R v Mika failed to engage with section 27 of the Sentencing Act 2002 in dismissing Mr Mika’s appeal against his sentence. In both the High Court and Court of Appeal the focus was on Mr Mika’s argument for a discount of 10 per cent to be applied to his sentence to reflect his Māori heritage and associated social disadvantages. Section 27 of the Sentencing Act would allow a court to take into account cultural information regarding Maori offenders’ backgrounds and the systemic disadvantages stemming from this. In dismissing Mika’s appeal, the Court erred in not considering the clear signals from Parliament that the judiciary were to take into account Maori offenders’ backgrounds at the sentencing stage throug...
Marae2-based Courts are an initiative of the Judiciary that builds on existing programmes for offend...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
A team bringing together a mix of perspectives and methods evaluated section 16 of New Zealand’s Cri...
The Court of Appeal in the case of R v Mika failed to engage with section 27 of the Sentencing Act 2...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in March 2012 in R. v. Ipeelee confirmed that the Court remai...
New Zealand’s 2002 Sentencing Act provides several ways a sentencing court may take an offender’s cu...
Section 718.2 (e)’s directive to canvass all available sanctions other than imprisonment that are re...
The grant of special leave in Bugmy v The Queen 1 has provided an occasion for the High Court to rul...
It is common knowledge, especially in the context of the findings of the Royal Commission into Abori...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
[extract] On 23 October 2010, a newspaper article criticising the use of Indigenous sentencing court...
Marae-based Courts are an initiative of the Judiciary that builds on existing programmes for offende...
This paper explores the argument that section 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code, which gives direction t...
This article considers the disproportionate incarceration rate of Aboriginal offenders in Canadian p...
Marae2-based Courts are an initiative of the Judiciary that builds on existing programmes for offend...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
A team bringing together a mix of perspectives and methods evaluated section 16 of New Zealand’s Cri...
The Court of Appeal in the case of R v Mika failed to engage with section 27 of the Sentencing Act 2...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in March 2012 in R. v. Ipeelee confirmed that the Court remai...
New Zealand’s 2002 Sentencing Act provides several ways a sentencing court may take an offender’s cu...
Section 718.2 (e)’s directive to canvass all available sanctions other than imprisonment that are re...
The grant of special leave in Bugmy v The Queen 1 has provided an occasion for the High Court to rul...
It is common knowledge, especially in the context of the findings of the Royal Commission into Abori...
There is a growing pool of research on court outcomes in sentencing Indigenous people but relatively...
[extract] On 23 October 2010, a newspaper article criticising the use of Indigenous sentencing court...
Marae-based Courts are an initiative of the Judiciary that builds on existing programmes for offende...
This paper explores the argument that section 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code, which gives direction t...
This article considers the disproportionate incarceration rate of Aboriginal offenders in Canadian p...
Marae2-based Courts are an initiative of the Judiciary that builds on existing programmes for offend...
Indigenous offenders are heavily over-represented in the Australian and Canadian criminal justice sy...
A team bringing together a mix of perspectives and methods evaluated section 16 of New Zealand’s Cri...