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2 Eur. J. on Crim. Pol'y & Rsch. 5 (1994)

handle is hein.journals/eurjcpr2 and id is 1 raw text is: Editorial
From a judicial point of view sentencing can be seen as the heart of
the criminal justice system. In the sentencing process several
objectives (retribution, prevention, deterrence, rehabilitation) and
several perspectives (the prosecutor's, the solicitor's, the defendant's
- and the victim's) combine to produce the final judgement. Emile
Durkheim saw the criminal procedure as 'a celebration of morality':
in the sentencing process a community sets its own standards. At the
same time political opportunities to influence the process of
sentencing in most countries are nil. The judge, and in some countries
the jury, has an independent status; Lady Justice is blindfolded.
This independency of jurisdiction can be seen as a cornerstone of
the constitutional state. This state of affairs however has the
disadvantage of disparity. There can be disparity in sentencing
between different courts of justice: a crime may be punished quite
differently, not only according to the background of the defendant but
also depending on the personal view of the judging party. A wider
problem is the disparity between the European countries. It seems
reasonable for a unifying Europe to aspire to a coherent and
consistent sentencing policy.
In 1992 the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe
adopted the Recommendation 'Consistency in sentencing' in which
the governments of the member states were incited to take measures
in order to avoid unwarranted disparity in sentencing. The text of this
Recommendation is given in this issue of the European Journal and
has inspired the compilation of this special issue on sentencing. The
Recommendation is elucidated by A. Ashworth, Chairman of the
Sentencing Committee which did the preparatory work: 'what the
committee has tried to produce is a set of attainable standards that
should succeed in bringing the sentencing systems of member states
closer together on many important issues'.
M. Killias (University of Lausanne) discusses, in his comment on
the Recommendation, the American experience with sentencing
guidelines and gives an outline of a sentencing model for European
countries. When standard penalties are set for different types of
offences, the judge is forced to explain the motives behind his

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