For at least half a century, reformers have urged American appellate courts to play a more active role in the sentencing process. Outside a small number of jurisdictions with binding sentencing guidelines, however, the appellate courts have generally failed to establish a meaningful role for themselves. The present article focuses on one particular function that appellate courts might usefully perform: that is, reviewing the adequacy of the explanations given by trial-court judges to justify their sentencing decisions. Such “explanation review” is conceptually distinct from substantive review of the sentence: the former asks whether the sentence has been adequately justified, while the latter asks whether the sentence could be adequately ju...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
In Wisconsin, trial courts have discretion to modify a defendant\u27s criminal sentence if the ...
For at least half a century, reformers have urged American appellate courts to play a more active ro...
For at least half a century, reformers have urged American appellate courts to play a more active ro...
Modern federal appellate review of sentences is a recent phenomenon introduced by the Sentencing Ref...
Despite the Supreme Court\u27s 2005 decision in United States v. Booker, which enhanced the power of...
Modern federal appellate review of sentences is a recent phenomenon introduced by the Sentencing Ref...
Unlike in most areas of the law, federal courts of appeals in the United States defer to trial court...
This article analyzes the enforceability of appeal-of-sentence waivers in terms of due process and p...
I. Introduction II. Origin and Development of the Non-Review Doctrine … A. Appellate Jurisdiction: E...
After the United States Supreme Court announced in United States v. Booker that, henceforth, federal...
I. Introduction II. Origin and Development of the Non-Review Doctrine … A. Appellate Jurisdiction: E...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
In Wisconsin, trial courts have discretion to modify a defendant\u27s criminal sentence if the ...
For at least half a century, reformers have urged American appellate courts to play a more active ro...
For at least half a century, reformers have urged American appellate courts to play a more active ro...
Modern federal appellate review of sentences is a recent phenomenon introduced by the Sentencing Ref...
Despite the Supreme Court\u27s 2005 decision in United States v. Booker, which enhanced the power of...
Modern federal appellate review of sentences is a recent phenomenon introduced by the Sentencing Ref...
Unlike in most areas of the law, federal courts of appeals in the United States defer to trial court...
This article analyzes the enforceability of appeal-of-sentence waivers in terms of due process and p...
I. Introduction II. Origin and Development of the Non-Review Doctrine … A. Appellate Jurisdiction: E...
After the United States Supreme Court announced in United States v. Booker that, henceforth, federal...
I. Introduction II. Origin and Development of the Non-Review Doctrine … A. Appellate Jurisdiction: E...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
This Article is the first to analyze critically the jurisdictional basis for the Supreme Court’s man...
In Wisconsin, trial courts have discretion to modify a defendant\u27s criminal sentence if the ...