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Consequences of Sentencing Trends in The Netherlands (From Contrasts in Tolerance, P 102-122, 1988, David Downes -- See NCJ-116928)

NCJ Number
116932
Author(s)
D Downes
Date Published
1988
Length
21 pages
Annotation
Sentencing policy in The Netherlands in recent decades has produced declining prison populations, resulting both in more humane administration of prisons than in the British penal system and in a possible contributing factor in the recent increases in the Dutch crime rate.
Abstract
The relative shortness of the length of prison sentences is probably a main reason for the humaneness of the Dutch prison system in comparison to other prison systems. Although the rise in crime is a possible consequence of the Dutch sentencing policy, it is probably attributable to more fundamental social and economic developments. The sentencing policy appears to have gone through three major phases since World War II. From the late 1940's to the mid-1960's, the impact of a rehabilitative philosophy seems crucial in explaining the trend towards shorter sentences. From the mid-1960's until the mid-1970's, the falling clearance rate and other constraints assumed increasing importance in enabling the judiciary to effect a continuation of these trends. Since the late 1970's, the period of shortening sentences has ended, and pressure to expand the capacity of the system is working through the political process. Tables.

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