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This book asks how we should make sense of sentencing when, despite huge efforts world-wide to analyse, critique and reform it, it remains an enigma. Sentencing: A Social Process reveals how both research and policy-thinking about sentencing are confined by a paradigm that presumes autonomous individualism, projecting an artificial image of sentencing practices and policy potential. By conceiving of sentencing instead as a social process, the book advances new policy and research agendas. Sentencing: A Social Process proposes innovative solutions to classic conundrums, including: rules versus discretion; aggravating versus mitigating factors; individualisation versus consistency; punishment versus rehabilitation; efficient technologies versus the quality of justice; and ways of reducing imprisonment.
Nominated for the Hart Socio-Legal Studies Association Book Prize 2020 Challenges prevailing assumptions Unlocks new research and policy reform agendas Releases fresh thinking about classic dilemmas (e.g. rules and discretion, using imprisonment; technology; penal effectiveness; consistency, efficiency and individualisation) Speaks widely to those in socio-legal studies, criminal justice and criminology as well as policy makers, practitioners in criminal justice, and courts administration
Auteur
Cyrus Tata is Professor of Law and Criminal Justice at Strathclyde University, Scotland, UK.
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