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Showing papers in "European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research in 1994"




Journal Article
TL;DR: Ashworth et al. as mentioned in this paper proposed a framework for European sentencing reform from rhetorics to reducing sentencing disparity and compared it to the Swedish Sentencing Law and Alternative sanctions in Sweden.
Abstract: ARTICLES: 1. Editorial 2. Towards European sentencing standards - A. Ashworth 3. Recommendation No. R (92) 17 4. Sentencing reform - from rhetorics to reducing sentencing disparity - M. Killias 5. Punitiveness in Europe - a comparison - M. Kommer 6. Alternative sanctions: myth and reality - J. Junger-Tas 7. The Swedish sentencing law - N. Jareborg 8. Sentencing and prison overcrowding - S. Snacken and K. Beyens 9. Varia: H. van de Bunt and E. van den Heuvel on the European Documentation and Research Network; 10. Dashkov on changes in Russia - influences on crime; 11. W. Haseker on foreign relations of the 'Polizei-Fuhrungsakademie'; 12. E. van den Heuvel about a book on police cooperation in Europe

18 citations





Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the USA, the first US National Crime Survey (NCS) survey was published in 1972 and has been repeated annually ever since as mentioned in this paper, which was used as a data source to provide much more information on victims, offenders and the consequences of criminal misbehavior than the police crime statistics.
Abstract: The deve lopment of v ic t imizat ion surveys started in the late sixties when the first modern-day 2 surveys of criminal vict imization were carried out in the USA funded by the Pres ident ' s Commiss ion on Law Enforcement and the Adminis t ra t ion of Justice (cf. Sparks, 1981). The original intention of these pilot studies was to develop a measure for cr ime that would be independent of the decisions and defini t ions inside the criminal just ice sys tem (Block and Block, 1984). Vict imizat ion surveys were seen as a means for overcoming the bias of police crime statistics and promis ing a solution to the problem of hidden crimes (dark figure) caused by unreported and/or unrecorded criminal incidents. Furthermore they were seen as a data source offer ing much more information on victims, offenders, and the consequences of criminal v ic t imizat ion than the police crime statistics. In 1972 the first US National Crime Survey was carried out and was repeated annually ever since. This survey had a high impact and many countries fol lowed the United States using methods derived f rom the NCS. Today national vict imizat ion surveys have been conducted in many countries, and in some of them, as for instance Great Britain (Mayhew and Hough, 1991; Mayhew and Maung, 1992) and the Netherlands (Van Dijk, 1991), they have been carried out repeatedly, thus al lowing analyses of national trends in vict imizat ion rates and report ing behaviour . However , as Block (1993) quite recently has shown, despite the fact that most national v ic t imizat ion surveys have the same origin the US National Crime Survey compar ison of the results o f vict imizat ion surveys of different nations is very difficult due to di f ferences in methods and range of crimes covered. Until 1989 there had been few regional studies that a l lowed for crossnat ional compar ison, as for instance the studies of Arnold, Kor inek and Teske (Teske and Arnold, 1991; Arnold and Korinek,

7 citations













Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The medical prescription of narcotics in the framework of the Swiss trials constitutes a well planned multicentric research study as mentioned in this paper, which is expected to shed light on some controversial questions (Mino, 1990; Rihs-Middel, in print).
Abstract: The medical prescription of narcotics in the framework of the Swiss trials constitutes a well planned multicentric research study. This study is expected to shed light on some controversial questions (Mino, 1990; Rihs-Middel, in print). Initial observations seem to indicate that the prescription of narcotics, especially of diamorphine could be an effective means of improving health and living conditions, at least temporarily, of heavily addicted patients for whom other treatment efforts have failed. Many questions remain to be answered, especially with respect to long-term effects.




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the first three years of the decade, there have been no indications that concern about crime has generated an upturn in prosecution of youthful offenders as mentioned in this paper, and neither this concern nor the introduction of the Criminal Justice Act 1991, has reversed the general trend of diverting young offenders from court and custody.
Abstract: Throughout the 1980s, major developments took place in the way in which agencies, which constituted the juvenile justice system, worked together. The 1990s have seen an increase in public and political attention on ‘law and order’. As yet, neither this concern, nor the introduction of the Criminal Justice Act 1991, has reversed the general trend of diverting young offenders from court and custody. Moreover, in the first three years of the decade, there have been no indications that concern about crime has generated an upturn in prosecution of youthful offenders.