Dr. Dan Law Researcher Profile picture
Feb 12 26 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Justice That Works: Report of the Scottish Sentencing and Penal Policy Commission - Some thoughts - a Thread - Full Report URL: shorturl.at/1g10f

My Research URL: shorturl.at/NnEnd

A Thread:
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Scotland’s “Justice Works” report promotes expanding alternatives to prosecution as efficient, rehabilitative, and victim-centred. This thread presents findings from my research critically evaluating that policy position.
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The Commission frames alternatives, including fiscal fines, diversion, and restorative measures, as proportionate mechanisms capable of reducing pressure on courts and custodial institutions.
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My research finds that this framing assumes legitimacy rather than subjecting it to systematic examination. Evaluation of justice mechanisms must extend beyond efficiency to include institutional balance and procedural integrity.
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The report prioritises system functionality. My analysis assesses alternatives according to principles of fairness, accountability, and the distribution of decision-making authority.
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Prosecutorial oversight is presented as a safeguard. My research questions whether concentrating sanctioning power within a non-judicial authority introduces structural vulnerability.
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The absence of judicial scrutiny removes a central mechanism through which state power is traditionally balanced. This tension receives limited examination within the report.
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The Commission normalises existing authority structures rather than critically assessing them. This omission weakens the comprehensiveness of its evaluation.
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Judicial processes provide transparency, adversarial testing, and adjudicative neutrality. My research highlights the need to determine whether alternatives offer functionally equivalent protections.
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The report instead emphasises outcome indicators such as speed, administrative efficiency, and demand reduction, leaving rights-based equivalence largely unaddressed.
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This produces a managerial orientation that measures performance rather than legitimacy, narrowing the analytical scope of the review.
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The Commission asserts the presence of strong supporting evidence and recommends expansion of alternatives.
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My research identifies gaps in empirical understanding of operational practice and impact, indicating that policy expansion may precede sufficient evaluation.
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Assumptions of effectiveness require systematic verification rather than reliance on aggregate policy narratives.
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Comparative institutional analysis provides additional perspective. My research indicates that international models demonstrate alternative structural approaches.
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The Commission adopts a predominantly domestic analytical frame, limiting engagement with potential structural reform informed by comparative evidence.
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Victim experience is a central justification within the report. Rapid resolution and communication improvements are presented as research finds that experiential outcomes cannot substitute for procedural safeguards in establishing systemic legitimacy.benefits.My
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The Commission focuses on administrative safeguards including guidance, monitoring, and consent mechanisms. My analysis distinguishes these from structural safeguards that constrain authority and maintain institutional balance, which remain insufficiently examined.
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Operational safeguards regulate process. Structural safeguards regulate power. This distinction is critical to evaluating justice mechanisms. The report’s expansionist position therefore appears insufficiently critical in addressing institutional vulnerabilities associated
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with non-judicial resolution. From my research perspective, the recommendations reflect policy management priorities rather than structural justice-system design considerations.
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This does not undermine the potential value of alternatives themselves. It indicates that their legitimacy cannot be treated as settled.
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A comprehensive policy evaluation would engage directly with issues of authority distribution, rights protection, research sufficiency, and comparative design. In the absence of such engagement, conclusions appear administratively persuasive but analytically incomplete.
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My research therefore identifies substantive blind spots within the Commission’s assessment.
This comparison demonstrates the importance of integrating doctrinal and structural critique into policy development.
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Justice reform requires balancing efficiency with legitimacy. Prioritising one at the expense of the other produces partial evaluation.
Accordingly, the “Justice Works” report is better interpreted as a policy argument than as a definitive analytical assessment.
24/ Which fails to address fundamental safeguards which are needed and highlighted in my work and submissions to the commission.
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