This thesis explores the highly controversial provision that gives life sentence prisoners the opportunity to apply for a reduction in their original periods of parole ineligibility. Section 745 (s.745) of the Criminal Code was created in 1976 when capital punishment was abolished and the penalty structure for the crime of homicide was revised. Recognizing that offenders convicted of first (and to a lesser extent) second degree murder would now spend considerable periods of time behind bars, legislators created a mechanism to allow for review of the changes that may take place in this new group of prisoners over the years. Critics contend that s.745 represents a loophole in the law and must be abolished. Advocates maintain that s.745 is par...
Section 231(5)(e) of the Criminal Code elevates murder to first-degree murder when a death is caused...
Since its introduction in 1978 as an alternative to the death penalty, there has been a dramatic inc...
Courtroom sentencing, as part of the judicial process, is a long-standing norm in the justice system...
Almost 12,000 people in the United States are serving life sentences for crimes that occurred when t...
This article reviews the constitutional arguments upheld by the QCCA in Bissonnette and weighs them ...
In the last thirty years, life without parole (LWOP) sentences have flourished in the United States....
Canada's murder sentencing regime has been in effect since 1976, and yet very little data has examin...
The idea that an inmate could possess a liberty interest in parole is a relatively recent developmen...
Parole for offenders serving life sentences has ignited questions in media reports and political cir...
Canada\u27s murder sentencing regime has been in effect since 1976, and yet very little data has exa...
Current due process law gives little protection to prisoners at the point of parole, even though the...
This article examines the effects that the new criteria for parole, introduced in 1992, have had on ...
The article makes a legal and comparative analysis of one of the legal institutions of execution of ...
Current due process law gives little protection to prisoners at the point of parole, even though the...
In 2013, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, following a United States Supreme Court case, ...
Section 231(5)(e) of the Criminal Code elevates murder to first-degree murder when a death is caused...
Since its introduction in 1978 as an alternative to the death penalty, there has been a dramatic inc...
Courtroom sentencing, as part of the judicial process, is a long-standing norm in the justice system...
Almost 12,000 people in the United States are serving life sentences for crimes that occurred when t...
This article reviews the constitutional arguments upheld by the QCCA in Bissonnette and weighs them ...
In the last thirty years, life without parole (LWOP) sentences have flourished in the United States....
Canada's murder sentencing regime has been in effect since 1976, and yet very little data has examin...
The idea that an inmate could possess a liberty interest in parole is a relatively recent developmen...
Parole for offenders serving life sentences has ignited questions in media reports and political cir...
Canada\u27s murder sentencing regime has been in effect since 1976, and yet very little data has exa...
Current due process law gives little protection to prisoners at the point of parole, even though the...
This article examines the effects that the new criteria for parole, introduced in 1992, have had on ...
The article makes a legal and comparative analysis of one of the legal institutions of execution of ...
Current due process law gives little protection to prisoners at the point of parole, even though the...
In 2013, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, following a United States Supreme Court case, ...
Section 231(5)(e) of the Criminal Code elevates murder to first-degree murder when a death is caused...
Since its introduction in 1978 as an alternative to the death penalty, there has been a dramatic inc...
Courtroom sentencing, as part of the judicial process, is a long-standing norm in the justice system...