Oxford University Press, 2018. — 289 p. — ISBN 9780190607616.
Приговор Многократных Преступлений
Most people assume that criminal offenders have only been convicted of a single crime. However,in reality almost half of offenders stand to be sentenced for more than one crime. The high proportion of multiple crime offenders poses a number of practical and theoretical challenges for the criminal justice system. For instance, how should courts punish multiple offenders relative to individuals who have been sentenced for a single crime? How should they be punished relative to each other?
Sentencing Multiple Crimes discusses these questions from the perspective of several legal theories. This volume considers questions such as the proportionality of the crimes committed, the temporal span between the crimes, and the relationship between theories about the punitive treatment of recidivists and multiple offenders. Contributors from around the world and in the fields of legal theory, philosophy, and psychology offer their perspectives to the volume. A comprehensive examination of the dynamics involved with sentencing multiple offenders has the potential to be a powerful tool for legal scholars and professionals, particularly given the practical importance of the topic and the relative dearth of research about punishment of multiple offense cases.
Sentencing the Multiple Offender: Setting the Stage
Retributivism, Multiple Offending, and Overall Proportionality
Exploring an Institutionalist and Post- Desert Theoretical Approach to Multiple-Offense Sentencing
Retributivism and Totality: Can Bulk Discounts for Multiple Offending Fit the Crime?
Multiple- Offense Sentencing Discounts: Score One for Hybrid Accounts of Punishment
Parsimony and the Sentencing of Multiple Offenders
Multiple Offenders and the Question of Desert
Sentencing the Multiple- Conviction Offender: Diminished Culpability for Related Criminal Conduct
Toward a Theoretical and Practical Model for Multiple- Offense Sentencing
Multiple- Offense Sentencing: Some Additional Thoughts
Principles and Procedures for Sentencing of Multiple Current Offenses
Sentencing the Multiple Offender: In Search of a “Just and Proportionate” Total Sentence
Multiple- Offense Sentencing: Looking for Pragmatism, Not a Unifying Principle
Solving the Multiple- Offense Paradox