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44 Queen's L.J. 284 (2018-2019)
Sentencing for Sexual Offences against Children and Youth: Mandatory Minimums, Proportionality and Unintended Consequences

handle is hein.journals/queen44 and id is 305 raw text is: 





Sentencing for Sexual Offences Against

Children and Youth: Mandatory Mini-

mums, Proportionality and Unintend-

ed Consequences


Janine Benede(

    In the past ifeen years, mandatory minimum sentences have become significantly
 more prominent in Canadian criminal law. Most analyses of the constitutionality
 ofmandatory minimums  have focused on their application in drug and gun crimes,
 as well as murder. In contrast, relatively little attention has been paid to mandatory
 minimums  attached to sexual offences committed against children and youth.
    The author argues that the introduction of mandatory minimums for sexual
 offences committed against children and youth does not address the power, gender
 and race inequalities that characterize sexual offending. The author outlines the
 major legislative reforms that created specific sexual offences against children and
 youth, added short mandatory minimum   sentences of imprisonment, and then
 fiurther increased the length of these minimums. The author shows that introducing
 mandatory minimums  for these offences was intended to block the availability of
 conditional sentence orders. This has caused a trend in post-mandatory minimum
 sentencing where longer conditional sentences have been replaced by very short
 custodial sentences at or near the mandatory minimum. The author overviews
 sentencing decisions in this area and concludes that the introduction of minimum
 sentences has short-circuited a deeper understanding of the harms of these crimes,
 and does nothing to prevent problematic judicial reasoning based on myths and
 stereotypes about child sexual abuse. These myths and stereotypes find their way
 into the sentencing process and lead to some aggravating factors being ignored or
 downplayed, while other factors are improperly identified as mitigating.
    The author suggests that the criminal justice system needs a solution that roots
 out lingering stereotypes in order to properly acknowledge and remedy the harms to
 child and youth victims, the group most vulnerable to sexual violence.

   Professor, Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia. The author is grateful for the
   research assistance of David Ferguson, Heather Burley and Hannah Roche, as well as the very
   helpful comments provided by Isabel Grant and Lisa Kelly. This research was supported in part
   by a grant from the Class of 68 Research Fund.
   Copyright @ 2019 by Janine Benedet


J. Benedet


284

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