Abstract

Some preliminary problems of principle The concepts of aggravation and mitigation have tended to attract little close examination or theoretical discussion. Perhaps this is because the factors recognized as aggravating or mitigating are thought to be uncomplicated or uncontroversial, or (in the terminology of the English judiciary) ‘well known’ and ‘well established’. However, it will be argued in this chapter that many of them raise contentious issues. These issues assume particular importance now for three particular reasons: several aggravating factors and one mitigating factor are statutory requirements under the Criminal Justice Act 2003, as we shall see; s. 166 of the 2003 Act reaffirms that the various statutory thresholds for imposing custodial sentences and community sentences should not be read as ‘prevent[ing] a court from mitigating an offender's sentence by taking into account such matters as, in the opinion of the court, are relevant in mitigation of sentence’; and s. 174(2) of the 2003 Act requires the court in any case to ‘mention any aggravating or mitigating factors which the court has regarded as being of particular importance’. For these three reasons, the analysis of the justifications for particular aggravating and mitigating factors becomes a more pressing task than may hitherto have been supposed. Moreover, the sentencing research by Hough, Jacobson and Millie shows that it was chiefly the influence of personal mitigating factors that often made the difference between a community sentence and a custodial sentence in cases ‘on the cusp’.

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