Available Formats
Predictive Sentencing: Normative and Empirical Perspectives
By (Author) Professor Jan W de Keijser
Edited by Professor Julian V Roberts
Edited by Professor Jesper Ryberg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
16th May 2019
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Legal aspects of criminology
Penology and punishment
345.0772
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
634g
Predictive Sentencing addresses the role of risk assessment in contemporary sentencing practices. Predictive sentencing has become so deeply ingrained in Western criminal justice decision-making that despite early ethical discussions about selective incapacitation, it currently attracts little critique. Nor has it been subjected to a thorough normative and empirical scrutiny. This is problematic since much current policy and practice concerning risk predictions is inconsistent with mainstream theories of punishment. Moreover, predictive sentencing exacerbates discrimination and disparity in sentencing. Although structured risk assessments may have replaced gut feelings, and have now been systematically implemented in Western justice systems, the fundamental issues and questions that surround the use of risk assessment instruments at sentencing remain unresolved. This volume critically evaluates these issues and will be of great interest to scholars of criminal justice and criminology.
The editors of this volume have assembled a distinguished group of scholars whose contributions incisively explore the many issues raised by predictive sentencing. The issues include its fit with standard views about the aims of legal punishment and with related moral concepts such as the rights and dignity of offenders. They also include the numerous complex and contested factors that go into making predictions about future offending, the accuracy of the resulting predictions, and the myriad uses to which they have been and might be put in sentencing. The volume is especially noteworthy for the range of disciplinary perspectives it contains, as well as for its well-informed and thoughtful analyses of the feasibility and defensibility of using predictions in sentencing. -- Professor Richard Lippke, Chair of the Department of Criminal Justice at Indiana University
Jan W de Keijser is Professor of Criminology at the University of Leiden, The Netherlands. Julian V Roberts is Professor of Criminology at the University of Oxford, and Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford. Jesper Ryberg is Professor of Ethics and Philosophy of Law at the Department of Philosophy at Roskilde University, Denmark.