Legal Constraints on the Indeterminate Control of ‘Dangerous’ Sex Offenders in the Community: The English Perspective

12 Pages Posted: 23 Dec 2016

See all articles by Nicola Padfield

Nicola Padfield

University of Cambridge - Institute of Criminology; University of Cambridge - Faculty of Law

Date Written: December 13, 2016

Abstract

This article explores the legal constraints imposed on the rising number of so-called ‘dangerous’ sex offenders in England and Wales, in particular once they have been released from prison into the community. The main methods of constraint are strict licence conditions, Multi-Agency Public Protection Arrangements and civil protective orders such as Sexual Harm Prevention Orders. ‘Control’ in the community is thus widespread, but is difficult to assess whether it is either effective or necessary without a great deal more research and analysis. Post-sentence ‘punishment’ has been largely ignored by both academic lawyers and criminologists. The article concludes that financial austerity might prove to be as important as the human rights agenda in curbing the disproportionate use of powers of control.

Keywords: dangerous, sex offenders, human rights, community supervision, punishment

Suggested Citation

Padfield, Nicola, Legal Constraints on the Indeterminate Control of ‘Dangerous’ Sex Offenders in the Community: The English Perspective (December 13, 2016). Erasmus Law Review, Vol. 9, No. 2, 2016, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2889003

Nicola Padfield (Contact Author)

University of Cambridge - Institute of Criminology ( email )

7 West Road
Cambridge, England
United Kingdom

University of Cambridge - Faculty of Law ( email )

10 West Road
Cambridge, CB3 9DZ
United Kingdom

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