Published in Criminal Law & Justice Weekly, Vol. 175, December 3 2011, p 721
Recently in CL&J (p.596, ante), Caron Thatcher and Emmanouela  Mylonaki of London South Bank University considered the sentences handed  out following the August riots in London and elsewhere. The theme of  their article was that some of the sentences were disproportionately  high, at least in the case of offences not involving violence. It seems  to me, however, that there are indeed reasons particular to riots which  do justify higher sentences than ordinary incidents of public disorder  or theft.     
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