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September 2, 2005
Sentencing reading for a long weekend
With the benefit of a three-day weekend, perhaps folks will want to take in the many exciting sounding sentencing-related articles I have recently noticed on SSRN. Though halftime of this weekend's kick-off college football games may not afford all the time needed for a complete review, all these articles below surely would make for great conversation starters at any tailgate:
- Guidance from Above and Beyond by Steven L. Chanenson
- Reconceptualizing Due Process in Juvenile Justice: Contributions from Law and Social Science by Mark R. Fondacaro, Christopher Slobogin and Tricia Cross
- Christian Witness, Moral Anthropology, and the Death Penalty by Richard W. Garnett
- The Economics of Shame: Why More Shaming May Deter Less by Alon Harel and Alon Klement
- Life v. Death: Or Why the Death Penalty Should Marginally Deter by Charles N.W. Keckler
- In Booker's Shadow: Restitution Forces the Second Debate on Honesty in Sentencing by Melanie D. Wilson
- Deterring Roper's Juveniles: Why Immature Criminal Youth Require the Death Penalty more than Adults - A Law & Economics Approach by Moin A. Yahya
September 2, 2005 at 06:50 PM | Permalink
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