Marc Miller, Robert Weisberg
págs. 1-36
The functions of sentencing and sentencing reform
Michael Tonry
págs. 37-66
Richard S. Frase
págs. 67-83
Disparity: The normative and empirical failure of the federal guidelines
Albert W. Alschuler
págs. 85-117
págs. 119-136
Regulating local variations in federal sentencing
Stephanos Bibas
págs. 137-154
The enforceability of sentencing guidelines
Kevin R. Reitz
págs. 155-173
Guidance from above and beyond
Steven L. Chanenson
págs. 175-194
From winship to apprendi to booker: constitutional command or constitutional blunder?
Ronald J. Allen, Ethan A. Hastert
págs. 195-216
A second chance for sentencing reform: establishing a sentencing agency in the judicial branch
Kate Stith, Karen Dunn
págs. 217-234
Mr. Madison meets a time machine: the political science of federal sentencing reform
Frank O. Bowman III
págs. 235-265
Reforming the federal sentencing guidelines' misguided approach to real-offense sentencing
David Yellen
págs. 267-275
págs. 277-291
págs. 293-308
Parity, disparity, and adversariality: First principles of sentencing
Margareth Etienne
págs. 309-322
Penal policy and penal legislation in recent American experience
Franklin E. Zimring
págs. 323-338
Smart public policy: replacing imprisonment with targeted nonprison sentences and collateral sanctions
págs. 339-360
"the wisdom we have lost": Sentencing information and its uses
págs. 361-380




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