Fundamentals of Sentencing Theory

Subjects:
Criminal Law
Contents:
Part I: Foundations of the Power to Punish
1: McCormick and Garland: Soverign States and vengeful Victims: the Problem of the Right to Punish
2: Gardner: Crime: In Proportion and In Perspective
3: Bottoms: Five Puzzles in von Hirsch's Theory of Punishment
Part II: Troublesome Issues in Sentencing Theory
4: Wasik: Crime Seriousness and the Offender-Victim Relationship in Sentencing
5: Jarebourg: Why Bulk Discounts in Multiple Offence Sentencing?
6: Duff: Dangerousness and Citizenship
7: Zedner: Sentencing Young Offenders
8: Husak: Desert, Proportionality, and the Seriousness of Drug Offences
Part III: Relating Theory to Contemporary Punishment Practice
9: Hudson: Doing Justice to Difference
10: Ashworth and Player: Sentencing, Equal Treatment, and the Impact of Sanctions
11: Kleinig: The Hardness of Hard Treatment.

ISBN13: 9780198262565
ISBN: 0198262566
Published: December 1999
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Binding: Hardback
Price: £67.50

The ""Oxford Monographs on Criminal Law and Justice"" series aims to cover all aspects of criminal law and procedure including criminal evidence. The scope of the series is wide, encompassing both practical and theoretical works. This volume is a thematic collection of essays on sentencing theory by leading writers. The essays fall into three groups. Part I considers the underlying justifications for the imposition of punishment by the State, and examines the relationship between victims, offenders and the State. Part II addresses a number of areas of sentencing policy that have given rise to particular difficulty, such as the sentencing of drug offenders, the rationale for discounting sentences for multiple offenders, the existence of special sentencing for young offenders, and cases where the injury done to the victim is of a different magnitude from what might have been expected.;This book is intended for academics in the fields of criminal law and justice.