This collection is welcome as it offers insights into the problems facing sentencers and penologists in taking past convictions into account Susan Easton Criminal Law Review 2011 The editors and contributors tackle a particularly thorny issue in this elegant 256-page text: Should an offender's previous convictions affect sentence?.. Professors Roberts and von Hirsch address with signal skill the question of just deserts and proportionality, the progressive loss of mitigation, the issues of first offender discounts. and the question of deserved punishment when recidivism is demonstrated Judge G. Renaud Criminal law Quarterly Volume 59 the experiences, developments and points of view in other countries, as described in this book, are very valuable to us J.A.W. Lensing Trema Straftoemetingsbulletin Nr 1, 2011 In Previous Convictions at Sentencing Roberts and Von Hirsch have brought together a selection of leading thinkers to illuminate an aspect of punishment theory and practice that has largely remained in the shadows despite its obvious importance. An attractive feature of the book, in addition to the thoughtful and penetrating analyses that it contains, is the vigorous exchange of views that takes place between its covers. The editors have not shied away from including perspectives that are at odds with their own, or from revising and reformulating their views, or indeed from finding fault with each other's conclusions. This internal dialogue helps to expose where further critical inquiry would yield the greatest return. Ian O'Donnell Punishment & Society 2011