RT Article T1 Racially Determined Case Characteristics: Exploring Disparities in the Use of Sentencing Factors in England and Wales JF The British journal of criminology VO 65 IS 2 SP 241 OP 260 A1 Guilfoyle, Eoin A2 Pina-Sánchez, Jose LA English YR 2025 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/192535458X AB There is little understanding of how documented ethnic disparities in sentencing outcomes in England and Wales come to be and, consequently, how to address them. We argue that disparities in sentence outcomes could stem from how cases are constructed. We hypothesize that case characteristics determined through a high degree of judicial discretion and an assessment of the offender have a high risk of being racially determined, and therefore, operate as precursors of ethnic disparities in sentencing. We test this using Crown Court Sentencing Survey and Court Proceedings data. We identify three sentencing factors (remorse, good character and ability to rehabilitate) clearly favouring White offenders. We contextualize their operation and argue that all three should be classified as racially determined and sources of ethnic disparity. We conclude by setting out targeted policy solutions. K1 Sentencing K1 Guidelines K1 Disparities K1 Ethnicity K1 Crown Court DO 10.1093/bjc/azae039