Answering for crime: responsibility and liability in the criminal law
In: Legal theory today
16 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Legal theory today
In: The trial on trial Vol. 2
In: [Oxford monographs in criminal law and justice]
In: Studies in crime and public policy
In: Cambridge studies in philosophy and law
In: Cambridge studies in philosophy
In: Philosophical introductions
In: The Religious in Responses to Mass Atrocity, S. 79-104
1. Introduction: Themes in Juvenile Justice -- Ido Weijers & Antony Duff -- PART I: PAST AND PRESENT -- 2. The Juvenile Justice System: Past and Present Trends in Western Society -- Josine Junger-Tas -- 3. Recent Changes in Youth Justice Policy in England and Wales -- Loraine Gelsthorpe -- 4. Rehabilitation in America: the Philosophy and Methods, from Past to Present -- Carter Hay & Mark Stafford -- PART II: EDUCATION AND PUNISHMENT -- 5. Not Punishing Children, but Committing them to Restore -- Lode Walgrave -- 6. Punishing the Young -- Antony Duff -- 7. The Moral Dialogue: a Pedagogical Perspective on Juvenile Justice -- Ido Weijers -- PART III: SHAME, GUILT AND REMORSE -- 8. Shame, Guilt and Remorse: Experiences from Family Group Conferences in New Zealand -- Allison Morris -- 9. Guilt, Shame and Shaming -- Gabriele Taylor -- 10. Shame, Guilt, Antisocial Behaviour and Juvenile Justice: A Psychological Perspective -- Tjeert Olthof
In: Oxford readings in socio-legal studies
In: Criminalization
We are said to face a crisis of over-criminalization: our criminal law has become chaotic, unprincipled, and over-expansive. This book proposes a theory of criminal law, as an institution that can play an important but limited role in the civil order of a political community: it shows how criminal law could be ordered, principled, and restrained
In: Social & legal studies: an international journal, Band 28, Heft 1, S. 3-9
ISSN: 1461-7390
This introduction presents a collection of papers by Alan Norrie, Craig Reeves, Susanne Karstedt, Tiffany Bergin, Michael Koch, Mary Bosworth, Anastasia Chamberlen, Henrique Carvalho and Anita Dockley. It briefly discusses the origins of this collaborative research project, and outlines the theme, aims and format of the special issue, which calls for an interdisciplinary, theoretically informed and conceptually and practically critical examination of punishment today. It then provides a summary of the approach and argument of each of the contributions to the issue and offers a few reflections on ways forward.
In: Criminalization series