The Scottish Sentencing Council is an independent advisory body which carries out a range of work concerning sentencing in Scotland.
Further information about the role and work of the Council can be found on the Council’s website:
www.scottishsentencingcouncil.org.uk
The Council, including the chair, consists of 12 members.
The Lord Justice Clerk is the Chair of the Council by virtue of her office. The remaining members are composed of five judicial and three legal members, appointed by the Lord Justice General, and three lay members - one constable, one person with knowledge of victims' issues and one other person who is not qualified as a judicial or legal member (“the ‘open’ position”), appointed by the Scottish Ministers.
In November 2021, the Council published its third business plan for the period 2021-24, which outlines the Council’s work programme over the coming three years and builds on progress since the establishment of the Council in 2015. Current priorities include the development of sentencing guidelines in relation to causing death by driving, sexual offences (with an initial focus on indecent images, rape, and sexual assault), domestic abuse, and sentence discounting. The Council has published finalised guidelines on the principles and purposes of sentencing; the sentencing process; and the sentencing of young people.
Scottish Ministers are seeking enthusiastic and committed applicants who would like to be considered for appointment as the victims’ expert on the Council.
Applications are welcomed and encouraged from the widest possible range of eligible persons and particularly from protected groups covered by the Equality Act 2010.