Politica criminale e scelte sanzionatorie. Per un recupero di razionalità nel confronto con il Sentencing System inglese
Abstract
This Ph.D. thesis investigates changes on the contemporary shape of
penal policies, whose trend fluctuate from a rigid punitiveness, which
mostly leads to the increase in term of custodial ranges within the
criminal code offences, toward “law and order” campaigns that aim to
answer to the social needs of safety; on the other hand, to avoid the
consequential ‘overcrowding’, policy makers constantly recall the use of
clemency measures. These contradictory sides of the same coin have
made the recent years of penal policies deeply irrational, as it is shown
by the ‘upward lifting’ on the custodial ranges, specially in light of the
proportionality principle.
Moreover, it will be verified whether the Italian Sentencing System has
itself an ‘immune system’ to counteract the irrationality or it has
implemented it through the decision-making process at sentencing, that
leads to arbitrary and inconsistent sentences.
Those data will be compared with the English Sentencing System and its
sentencing guidelines in order to evaluate if and how it can offer to the
Italian system some clue for a reform base that could enlighten again
the proportionality principle at sentencing. [edited by Author]