Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Unjust Enrichment and Countervailing Obligations

Unjust Enrichment and Countervailing Obligations

Price: £85.00

Adoption Law:
A Practical Guide 2nd ed




Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Enquiries of Local Authorities
and Water Companies:
A Practical Guide 7th ed



 Keith Pugsley, Ken Miles


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Judges and Convicts: The Principles and Patterns of Criminal Sentencing in Victorian England


ISBN13: 9781041040361
To be Published: July 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £36.99



Uncovering the origins of the new sentencing structure that emerged in the course of the nineteenth century, this book travels from the demise of the ‘Bloody Code’ in the 1830s, through the mid-century transition from convict transportation to home-based penal servitude, and on to the remarkable and unprecedented mitigation of sentencing severity in the final two decades of the century.

By providing such an extended span of analysis, this book reveals the discrete stages of development in sentencing policy and practice, and particularly the contribution of the small coterie of professional judges at the county Assizes, the Old Bailey (or Central Criminal Court), and the Middlesex Sessions, around whose sentencing decisions the study revolves. In consequence, readers are offered an overarching survey of the nineteenth-century trends in sentencing, including an account of the struggle between politicians, mandarins, and judges for supremacy in sentencing, and with a detailed explanation of that remarkable mitigation of sentencing severity that ultimately defined a new equation between crime and punishment, or the modern sentencing tariff.

Judges and Convicts: The Principles and Patterns of Criminal Sentencing in Victorian England will be of great appeal to students and scholars of history, law, criminology, and sociology, and particularly to those with an interest in the history of the criminal trial, the judiciary, punishment, and sentencing.

Subjects:
Legal History
Contents:
Introduction.
1. To Go’the Assize Circuit
2. The Criminal Courts
3. Principles of Sentencing
4. Mitigation
5. Sentencing in the Time of Transportation
6. A New Penal Equation
7. Sentencing in an Age of Panic
8. Tilt Towards Leniency
9. Abatement of Penal Servitude
10. Explaining Judicial Leniency. Envoi