Sentencing for Murder: Exploring Public Knowledge and Public Opinion in England and Wales1
Source Information
January 2012, Volume52(Issue1)Pages 141To 158 -Permalink
URI
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DOI
Click to copy the URI to your clipboard.https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azr073
Abstract
In 1965, it was thought that nothing less than a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment would be an acceptable replacement for the death penalty for murder in England and Wales. It was assumed that anything else would have led to a significant loss of public confidence in the criminal justice system. The authors have recently conducted what is believed to be the first survey in this country that tests this assumption, as well as the extent of public knowledge and belief of the current system for sentencing convicted murderers. The survey casts doubt over the assumption and highlights the misunderstanding and lack of knowledge on which public opinion is based.