2.3 Flashcards
What are the 4 types of sentence court can give?
- prison
- community sentence
- fines
- discharge
Describe life sentences (a prison sentence)
- Most severe.
- Judge sets minimum term before parole considered
- Conditions are attached to any release.
• Person will remain ‘on licence’ for life
• Mandatory life sentences-life given because of the crime, e.g. murder - Discretionary life sentences can be given by a judge
•Whole life terms are for the rest of someone’s life
Describe intermediate sentences (a prison sentence)
-Serious crimes
• Person a risk to society.
• No minimum term set (unlike life sentence)
• Parole Board decides if person can be released.
• Abolished in 2012 so cannot be given, but still 2,600 serving them.
(Known as IPP’s)
Describe determinate sentences (a prison sentence)
- Most sentences belong in this category.
- Sentence has a set length.
- Normal for only part to be served.
- Under 1 year, person usually released after half.
- Over 1 year, person released after half but remains on licence = probation supervision-conditions usually attached.
- After period of licence ends, still on probation for 12 months.
Describe a suspended sentence
- Can be imposed if the prison sentence would be less that 12 months
- Have to adhere to set conditions
- Must not reoffend
- If they do reoffend will serve prison sentence for original offence and new offence.
Describe a whole life tariff (a prison sentence)
Go to prison for life/forever, no parole
Explain why prison meets the aim of retribution
Meets the aim for some cases such as theft as prison takes away a persons freedom as punishment which can be seen as proportional
Explain why prison doesn’t meet the aim of retribution
Doesn’t meet the aim for extreme cases e.g. Rachel Nickell as prison may not be seen as proportionate to the trauma/harm caused
Explain why prison meets the aim of rehabilitation
-It provides rehabilitation programmes such as thinking skills programme, DID, etc
- point of prison is to try change person
Explain why prison doesn’t meet the aim of rehabilitation
- As few prisons have adequate rehabilitation programmes and lack resources and training in prisons which means access is limited
- only 3% of people identified as having drug/alcohol problems get access to rehabilitation programmes
- left realists say need to tackle root cause
- reoffending rates: 46% of adults reoffend at within one year of being released
Explain why prison meets the aims of reparation
- The Prisoners’ Earning Act 2011 says that if prisoners earn money from a skill/trade while in prison that some can be used for victim support (but doesn’t happen very often)
- if includes RJ programmes: RJ has a 85% satisfaction rate for victims. It empowers them to heal
Explain why prison doesn’t meet the aim of reparation
- doesn’t really repair much harm done, other than knowledge offender punished
- cannot repair some damage e.g. murder such as Rachel Nickell case
- RJ can be dangerous for DA cases as vulnerable to being re victimised
Explain why prison meets the aim of deterrence
- As harsh punishment can make people think twice
- right realists believe prison works + rational choice theory + operant conditioning
Explain why prison doesn’t meet the aim of deterrence
- a lot of people don’t act rationally when they commit crime (may be under influence of drugs, alcohol, extreme emotion or mental illness)
- as reoffending rates: 46% of adults reoffend within 1 year (of being released)
- left realists believe need to tackle root cause and prison doesn’t (if lack rehabilitation programmes)
Explain why prison meets the aim of public protection
- keep dangerous prisoners seperate from society E.g. Charles Bronson one of the longest serving prisoner as risk to society
- there is whole life tariffs E.g. Lucy Letby killer nurse (killed babies)
- longer sentences have become more common
- intermediate sentences and whole life terms allow authorities to keep people away indefinitely
Explain why prison doesn’t meet the aim of public protection
- once released can still cause harm to the public
- reoffending rates: 46% of adults reoffend within 1 year (of being released)
- whole life tariffs are rarely given
- prisons are universities of crime- offenders learn new criminal skills and go on to reoffend