Study among readers of local Dutch newspapers on the effects of readers jury's on perceptions and attitudes toward crime and law practice. When the public receives better factual information about the workings of the criminal law system and specific cases, she will be more positive about the courts and judges as well as demand less severe punishments than when the public does not receive this information
In the Netherlands the recent debate on lay involvement in the administration of criminal justice wa...
Public opinion research shows that the general public tends to perceive non-custodial sanctions, suc...
These data were collected for the first study on public support for vigilantism. The data collection...
Study among readers of local Dutch newspapers on the effects of readers jury's on perceptions and at...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people's attitudes ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people’s attitudes ...
This article examines the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article examines the gap between dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
Examination of the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of senten...
In two studies among representative samples of the Dutch population we examine public opinion about ...
Objectives: Providing detailed information about sentencing reduces punitive attitudes of laymen (th...
Given the opportunity, how would the Dutch public sentence perpetrators of different types of crime?...
A comparison of the attitude toward the objectives of punishment proposed in criminal law theory (re...
Dutch criminal justice policy assumes that people's faith in the criminal justice system depend...
This international comparative project investigated types of lay participation, views of judges and ...
In the Netherlands the recent debate on lay involvement in the administration of criminal justice wa...
Public opinion research shows that the general public tends to perceive non-custodial sanctions, suc...
These data were collected for the first study on public support for vigilantism. The data collection...
Study among readers of local Dutch newspapers on the effects of readers jury's on perceptions and at...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people's attitudes ...
This article reports on a field experiment on the effect of media information on people’s attitudes ...
This article examines the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
This article examines the gap between dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of ...
Examination of the gap between Dutch judges and the public in terms of preferred severity of senten...
In two studies among representative samples of the Dutch population we examine public opinion about ...
Objectives: Providing detailed information about sentencing reduces punitive attitudes of laymen (th...
Given the opportunity, how would the Dutch public sentence perpetrators of different types of crime?...
A comparison of the attitude toward the objectives of punishment proposed in criminal law theory (re...
Dutch criminal justice policy assumes that people's faith in the criminal justice system depend...
This international comparative project investigated types of lay participation, views of judges and ...
In the Netherlands the recent debate on lay involvement in the administration of criminal justice wa...
Public opinion research shows that the general public tends to perceive non-custodial sanctions, suc...
These data were collected for the first study on public support for vigilantism. The data collection...