Crime, Reason and History

Crime, Reason and History
Title Crime, Reason and History PDF eBook
Author Alan Norrie
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 308
Release 2001-10
Genre Law
ISBN 9780521606011

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This work provides a challenging approach to the study of criminal law, offering a critical introduction to the law's general principles and, in contrast to orthodox criminal law texts, emphasizes the tensions and contradictions that lie at their heart.

Crime, Reason and History

Crime, Reason and History
Title Crime, Reason and History PDF eBook
Author Alan Norrie
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 451
Release 2014-10-09
Genre Law
ISBN 0521516463

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This book provides a challenging, alternative, critical approach to every other text which deals with the criminal law's general principles.

Leading Works in Criminal Law

Leading Works in Criminal Law
Title Leading Works in Criminal Law PDF eBook
Author Chloë Kennedy
Publisher Taylor & Francis
Pages 278
Release 2023-08-11
Genre Law
ISBN 1000926281

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This book analyses a selection of leading works in the criminal law to ask questions about how the modern discipline of criminal law has developed, how it has been deployed in colonial and postcolonial contexts, and how criminal law scholarship has engaged with traditionally marginalised perspectives such as feminism, queer theory, and anti-carceral and abolitionist movements. The works analysed range from Macaulay’s Indian Penal Code (1837) to more recent textbooks and monographs on criminal law, and their jurisdictional reach extends to India, Canada, Australia, Malawi, the UK and the USA. The contributing authors include scholars, activists and legal practitioners, each of whom explores the intellectual development and geographical reach of Anglocriminal law via the work they analyse. Across the collection, the editors and contributors address the question of what it means to be a leading work in criminal law. The book will be a valuable resource for students, academics and researchers working in the area of criminal law.

The Origins of Modern Financial Crime

The Origins of Modern Financial Crime
Title The Origins of Modern Financial Crime PDF eBook
Author Sarah Wilson
Publisher Routledge
Pages 259
Release 2014-06-05
Genre Law
ISBN 1136237720

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The recent global financial crisis has been characterised as a turning point in the way we respond to financial crime. Focusing on this change and ‘crime in the commercial sphere’, this text considers the legal and economic dimensions of financial crime and its significance in societal consciousness in twenty-first century Britain. Considering how strongly criminal enforcement specifically features in identifying the post-crisis years as a ‘turning point’, it argues that nineteenth-century encounters with financial crime were transformative for contemporary British societal perceptions of ‘crime’ and its perpetrators, and have lasting resonance for legal responses and societal reactions today. The analysis in this text focuses primarily on how Victorian society perceived and responded to crime and its perpetrators, with its reactions to financial crime specifically couched within this. It is proposed that examining how financial misconduct became recognised as crime during Victorian times makes this an important contribution to nineteenth-century history. Beyond this, the analysis underlines that a historical perspective is essential for comprehending current issues raised by the ‘fight’ against financial crime, represented and analysed in law and criminology as matters of enormous intellectual and practical significance, even helping to illuminate the benefits and potential pitfalls which can be encountered in current moves for extending the reach of criminal liability for financial misconduct. Sarah Wilson’s text on this highly topical issue will be essential reading for criminologists, legal scholars and historians alike. It will also be of great interest to the general reader. The Origins of Modern Financial Crime was short-listed for the Wadsworth Prize 2015.

Redirecting Human Rights

Redirecting Human Rights
Title Redirecting Human Rights PDF eBook
Author A. Grear
Publisher Springer
Pages 289
Release 2010-04-09
Genre Law
ISBN 0230274633

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Against the backdrop of globalization and mounting evidence of the corporate subversion of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights paradigm, Anna Grear interrogates the complex tendencies within law that are implicated in the emergence of 'corporate humanity'. Grear presents a critical account of legal subjectivity, linking it with law's intimate relationship with liberal capitalism in order to suggest law's special receptivity to the corporate form. She argues that in the field of human rights law, particularly within the Universal Declaration of Human Rights paradigm, human embodied vulnerability should be understood as the foundation of human rights and as a key qualifying characteristic of the human rights subject. The need to redirect human rights in order to resist their colonization by powerful economic global actors could scarcely be more urgent.

Historical Origins of International Criminal Law

Historical Origins of International Criminal Law
Title Historical Origins of International Criminal Law PDF eBook
Author Morten Bergsmo
Publisher Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher
Pages 998
Release 2015-11-19
Genre Law
ISBN 8283480162

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Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law

Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law
Title Philosophical Foundations of Criminal Law PDF eBook
Author R. A. Duff
Publisher OUP Oxford
Pages 655
Release 2013-01-24
Genre Law
ISBN 0191654701

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Twenty-five leading contemporary theorists of criminal law tackle a range of foundational issues about the proper aims and structure of the criminal law in a liberal democracy. The challenges facing criminal law are many. There are crises of over-criminalization and over-imprisonment; penal policy has become so politicized that it is difficult to find any clear consensus on what aims the criminal law can properly serve; governments seeking to protect their citizens in the face of a range of perceived threats have pushed the outer limits of criminal law and blurred its boundaries. To think clearly about the future of criminal law, and its role in a liberal society, foundational questions about its proper scope, structure, and operations must be re-examined. What kinds of conduct should be criminalized? What are the principles of criminal responsibility? How should offences and defences be defined? The criminal process and the criminal trial need to be studied closely, and the purposes and modes of punishment should be scrutinized. Such a re-examination must draw on the resources of various disciplines-notably law, political and moral philosophy, criminology and history; it must examine both the inner logic of criminal law and its place in a larger legal and political structure; it must attend to the growing field of international criminal law, it must consider how the criminal law can respond to the challenges of a changing world. Topics covered in this volume include the question of criminalization and the proper scope of the criminal law; the grounds of criminal responsibility; the ways in which offences and defences should be defined; the criminal process and its values; criminal punishment; the relationship between international criminal law and domestic criminal law. Together, the essays provide a picture of the exciting state of criminal law theory today, and the basis for further research and debate in the coming years.