Dr Graeme Brown

Dr Graeme Brown
Dr Graeme Brown
Dr Graeme Brown

LL.B (Hons), LL.M, MSc, MJur (Dunelm), PhD (Edin), Dip LP, Cert FMS, NP, Solicitor

Senior Lecturer

Accepting PhDs

About
Email Address
graeme.brown@abdn.ac.uk
Telephone Number
+44 (0)1224 273490
Office Address
Room C52 Taylor Building
Old Aberdeen Campus
High Street
AB24 3UB

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School/Department
School of Law

Biography

Dr Brown joined the School of Law as a Senior Lecturer in January 2022.  He was previously a professional support lawyer to the Court of Criminal Appeal in Edinburgh, an Honorary Fellow in Law at the University of Edinburgh, and a lecturer in criminal law at Durham University.

Dr Brown holds two Masters degrees in law, a third Masters degree in criminal justice, and a PhD in law. He is a graduate of the Universities of Aberdeen (LLB (Hons), Dip LP); Northumbria (LLM); Glasgow and Strathclyde (MSc); Durham (MJur); and Edinburgh (PhD). He is an enrolled solicitor (admitted 2001; currently non-practising). Both his MJur and PhD theses were passed without corrections.  His PhD was supported by a studentship from the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research.

Dr Brown has lectured on sentencing at judicial training events and at seminars for the legal profession in Scotland and the Republic of Ireland. He regularly writes on sentencing issues in practitioners' journals such as the Scots Law Times and Greens Criminal Law Bulletin. He has also published in the Irish Judicial Studies Journal and the Criminal Law Review.  Since 2024, Dr Brown has been a contributing editor to Renton & Brown's Criminal Procedure (6th edition) and Morrison's Sentencing Practice.

Dr Brown's first research monograph, Criminal Sentencing as Practical Wisdom, was published by Hart in hardback in 2017, and in paperback in 2019 (https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/criminal-sentencing-as-practical-wisdom-9781509902613/). The book was cited by the Supreme Court of Canada in R v Parranto 2021 SCC 46.  His second monograph, Sentencing Rape: A Comparative Analysis, was published by Hart in hardback in 2020, and in paperback in 2023 (https://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/sentencing-rape-9781509917570/). It was cited by the Irish Court of Appeal in DPP v JMcD [2021] IECA 31.

Dr Brown's current research focuses on sentencing theory, law and practice, and comparative approaches to sentencing.

Qualifications

  • LL.B (Hons) Law 
    1999 - University of Aberdeen 
  • Dip LP Legal Practice 
    2000 - University of Aberdeen 
  • NP Solicitor and Notary Public 
    2001 - Law Society of Scotland 
  • MSc Criminal Justice 
    2007 - Universities of Glasgow and Strathclyde 

    Awarded with Distinction.

  • LL.M Advanced Legal Practice 
    2008 - Northumbria University 

    Awarded with Distinction.

  • MJur Law 
    2016 - Durham University, Van Mildert College 

    My MJur thesis was examined by Mr Thomas O'Malley SC (barrister, and Senior Lecturer, NUI Galway) and Professor Clare McGlynn KC (Durham University).  My thesis was passed without corrections.

     

    A re-worked and expanded version of this thesis was published as a research monograph entitled 'Sentencing Rape: A Comparative Analysis' (Hart Publishing, 2020 (hardback) and 2023 (paperback)).

  • PhD Law 
    2014 - University of Edinburgh 

    My PhD was supervised by Professor Richard Sparks (University of Edinburgh) and the late Professor Jacqueline Tombs (Glasgow Caledonian University).  My thesis was examined by the late Professor Gerry Maher KC (University of Edinburgh) and Professor Andrew Ashworth CBE, KC (Emeritus Vinerian Professor of English Law, University of Oxford).  I achieved the distinction of having my PhD thesis passed without corrections.

     

    My doctorate was funded by a studentship from the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research.  A re-worked and expanded version of this PhD thesis was published as a research monograph entitled 'Criminal Sentencing as Practical Wisdom' (Hart Publishing, 2017; paperback edition published in 2019).

  • Cert FMS Forensic Medicine and Science 
    2009 - Division of Pathology, University of Edinburgh 

Memberships and Affiliations

Internal Memberships

Deputy Director of the postgraduate Diploma in Professional Legal Practice (DPLP).

Member of the University's Addressing Gender-Based Violence and Sexual Harassment Strategy Group. 

External Memberships

Enrolled solicitor (Scotland).

Latest Publications

View My Publications

Research

Research Overview

Sentencing theory, law and practice; comparative approaches to sentencing; criminal law; sexual offences; firearms offences; judicial decision making; forensic medicine.

Research Areas

Accepting PhDs

I am currently accepting PhDs in Law.


Please get in touch if you would like to discuss your research ideas further.

Email Me

Law

Accepting PhDs

Research Specialisms

  • Criminal Justice
  • Criminal Law

Our research specialisms are based on the Higher Education Classification of Subjects (HECoS) which is HESA open data, published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence.

Current Research

Dr Brown is currently undertaking two large-scale research projects on sentencing law and practice: a practitioner monograph on sentencing as part of the Scottish Universities Law Institute series; and a third research monograph for Hart Publishing on sentencing offences involving prohibited firearms.

 

Sentencing Law and Practice (SULI)

Dr Brown has been commissioned by the Scottish Universities Law Institute (SULI) to write a two-volume work on sentencing, entitled Sentencing Law and Practice.  Volume 1 (Principles of Sentencing) deals with the broad themes and principles of sentencing theory and judicial decision-making in sentencing.  Volume 2 (Sentencing Practice) examines sentencing practice for specific offences.

Volume 1 provides an in-depth discussion of the sentencing process, and the nature of judicial discretion in sentencing.  It provides an authoritative account of the rules governing particular disposals, including custodial sentences, non-custodial sentences, and incidental disposals.  Volume 1 also provides an in-depth discussion of sentencing principles by reference to relevant appellate decisions.  Issues covered include aggravating and mitigating factors in sentencing; the sentencing of young offenders; and the operation of the guilty plea discount.

Volume 2 of the work considers sentencing practice for particular offences, including sexual offences; drug offences; road traffic offences; firearms offences; assault; and offences of dishonesty.  Volume 2 considers guideline judgments issued by the High Court of Justiciary on appeal and the Sheriff Appeal Court; appellate sentencing guidance and statements of principle issued by the appellate courts; and formal sentencing guidelines.

The Scottish Universities Law Institute series comprises a definitive collection of texts on modern Scots law (https://www.sweetandmaxwell.co.uk/wgreen/suli.htm).  With in-depth coverage of both general principles and sentencing for specific offences, the work will be a comprehensive and authoritative source for practitioners and for the courts.

 

Sentencing and Prohibited Firearms: Comparative Law, Policy and Practice (Hart Publishing/Bloomsbury)

Dr Brown is also working on a third research monograph for Hart Publishing/Bloomsbury.  Entitled Sentencing and Prohibited Firearms: Comparative Law, Policy and Practice, the book is under contract with Hart.  This monograph examines sentencing law and practice for offences involving the possession and use of prohibited firearms in four jurisdictions: England & Wales, Scotland, the Republic of Ireland, and Canada.  Focusing on statutory minimum sentence regimes, sentencing guidelines, and case law in each jurisdiction, the book situates the law within its broader social and theoretical contexts.

The book explores the nature and effect of firearms, including rifles, handguns, shotguns, and electric shock weapons, as well as prohibited ammunition, through a review of the literature on wound ballistics.  The book explores sentencing law and practice in each jurisdiction, including minimum sentence provisions; the issuing of guideline judgments; the development of formal sentencing guidelines; and, in the cases of Ireland and Canada, the Supreme Court decisions in Ellis v Minister for Justice and Equality (2019) and R v Nur (2015) which struck down certain minimum sentence provisions as unconstitutional.  An analysis of the development of sentencing guidance in the UK is provided, from the decision of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) in R v Avis (1988); through the adoption of the Avis guidelines by the Scottish courts; to the English Sentencing Council's 2020 Definitive Guidelines.

The analysis is undertaken with a view to considering the future of mandatory sentencing policies, and suggesting a new model of sentencing guidance for offences involving prohibited weapons.  Combining a strong practical and theoretical focus on the sentencing of firearms offences, the book will be of interest to the judiciary, legal practitioners, academic researchers, and policy makers.

Knowledge Exchange

Dr Brown has lectured on criminal law and sentencing at training events for the judiciary in Scotland and in the Republic of Ireland.  He has lectured at events organised by the Judicial Institute in Scotland, and in November 2018 he delivered a presentation on 'Judicial Reasoning in Sentencing' at the Committee for Judicial Studies National Conference in Dublin.

Dr Brown also delivers lectures at training events for the legal profession.  He has lectured on criminal law, criminal procedure, sexual offences, and sentencing at events run by Central Law Training Scotland (part of the University of Law) and the Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland.

Teaching
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