Sentencing for multiple crimes /

'Sentencing for Multiple Crimes' confronts the practical and theoretical challenges for the criminal justice system when punishing multiple crime offenders, including the proportionality of the crimes committed, the temporal span between the crimes, and the relationship between theories ab...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Ryberg, Jesper (Editor), Roberts, Julian V. (Editor), Keijser, Jan Willem de, 1968- (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY, United States of America : Oxford University Press, [2017]
Series:Studies in penal theory and philosophy.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Sentencing the multiple offender : setting the stage / Jesper Ryberg, Julian V. Roberts and Jan W. de Keijser
  • Retributivism, multiple offending, and overall proportionality / Jesper Ryberg
  • Exploring an institutionalist and post-desert theoretical approach to multiple offence sentencing / Anthony Bottoms
  • Retributivism and totality : can bulk discounts for multiple offending fit the crime? / Christopher Bennett
  • Multiple-offense sentencing discounts : score one for hybrid accounts of punishment / Zachary Hoskins
  • Parsimony and the sentencing of multiple offenders / Richard L. Lippke
  • Multiple offenders and the question of desert / Youngjae Lee
  • Sentencing the multiple conviction offender: diminished culpability for related criminal conduct / Julian V. Roberts and Jan W. de Keijser
  • Toward a theoretical and practical model for multiple-offence sentencing / Natalia Vibla
  • Multiple-offence sentencing : some additional thoughts / Andreas von Hirsch
  • Principles and procedures for sentencing of multiple current offenses / Richard S. Frase
  • Sentencing the multiple offender : in search of a "just and proportionate" total sentence / Andrew Ashworth and Martin Wasik
  • Multiple offence sentencing : looking for pragmatism not a unifying principle / Allan Manson
  • Solving the multiple offense paradox / Michael Tonry.