Title of article :
Punishing Forest Offenders: Out of Court or by the Court?
Author/Authors :
Mohd, Rusli Universiti Putra Malaysia - Faculty of Forestry, Malaysia , Simin, Miskon Sabah Forestry Department, Malaysia
From page :
25
To page :
31
Abstract :
This study compared the extent of compounded and court cases and the penalties charged for thetwo categories of offences. Data on 119 offences, of which 73% were compounded cases coveringthe period 1998 to 2002, were analysed. It was found that the mean penalty charged per offence washigher for compounded cases (RM37,180) than court cases (RM26,988). The mean penalties forillegal logging, evasion of royalty and encroachment compounded cases were RM91, 690, RM27, 932and RM147, 000, respectively. Meanwhile, the corresponding values for the court cases were RM39,500, RM12 668 and RM47, 760, respectively. Further analysis revealed that there was no significantdifference in the mean penalties between the three types of offences for the court cases. However,there were significant differences in mean penalties for the the compounded cases. In addition,the regression model developed showed that for every unit increase in the cubic meter of illegallogging, there was a corresponding increase in the penalty by RM4692.39 for the courts cases andRM3151.17 for the compounded cases. The results suggested that, in terms of deterrence, the courtsare the better means for punishing forest offenders.
Keywords :
Forest offenders , illegal logging , court cases , penalty
Journal title :
Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (JSSH)
Journal title :
Pertanika Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (JSSH)
Record number :
2561839
Link To Document :
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