Foreword, the Rt Hon Sir Colman TreacyEditors' Introduction, Gabrielle Watson and Marie ManikisPART I. Fundamentals of Sentencing and Penal Theory1. Culpability, Consequences, and Sentencing, Andrew Ashworth2. 'Responsive Penal Censure' and Its Implications, RA Duff3. How to Delimit the Desert Base of Criminal Offenders: On Roberts' Dynamic Censure Model, Jesper Ryberg4. The Evolution of Proportionality in Sentencing: Strengthening Communication and Individualization, Marie Manikis5. Retributivism and the 'Black Boxes' of Imprisonment, Netanel Dagan and David P Cole6. Pluralism in the Justification of Punishment, Leo Zaibert7.
Sentencing Ethically, Gabrielle WatsonPART II. Sentencing Policy and Penal Practice8. Professor Roberts' Disproportionate Contribution to Proportionality, David M Paciocco9. In Search of Proportionate Sentencing, Anthony N Doob and Jane B Sprott10. Questioning the Fairness and Utility of Prior Record Sentence Enhancements, Richard S Frase11. Guiding Sentencers: The Value and Disvalue of Sentencing Guidelines, Antje du Bois-Pedain12. When Is a Sentence a Miscarriage of Justice?, Kent Roach13. Beyond the Dreaming Spires: Julian V Roberts as Scholar and Policy Entrepreneur, Arie FreibergPART III.
Public Opinion and Criminal Justice14. Thirty-Five Years of Research on Attitudes to Punishment, Mike Hough15. Vigilantism and 'Public Confidence': The Pertinence of Public Opinion to Sentencing, Michael Tonry16. Victims at Parole, Nicola PadfieldAfterword, Lucia Zedner.