Search results for: "sent" (2128 results)
of criminal injustice. A world of crim- inal injustice where the unforgiven are sentenced to a sad, hate-filled state of unliving, as if unliving is
Joseph Story put it in 1833, that “every freeman has the undoubted right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public.” The purpose of the ban
sentencing,” and that there was “strong evidence” of differential treatment of women and men in courts and chambers. A decade later, in 1996, Justice
making . . . in domestic violence, juvenile justice, matrimonial law, and sentencing,” and that there was “strong evidence” of differential treatment of
States reflecting, after all, the majority sentiment in those States, have had restrictions on abortion for at least a century is a strong indication
% believed quality of life would be better in the absence of an LHD (N=49). One Sea Street owner echoed a sentiment common among respondents: “I’ve lived
have chipped away at affirmative 126. Justice O’Connor revealed a similar sentiment in Grutter when she suggested a twenty-five- year limit on race
legal norms.7 On the rare occasion when outlawry has been invoked as a legal sentence, it has been disparaged as the Western equivalent of the
core purpose and effect of atonement. Discussion of the role of mercy in criminal law, and particularly in sentencing, appears occasionally in the
” Perhaps that example is sentimental, but then consider “democracy” or “art.” These too are social objects constituted in part by values—equality or