Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment showcases a variety of disciplinary, methodological, and theoretical approaches that, taken together, frame historical analysis in the study and teaching of criminal law. Featuring work by historians, lawyers, theorists, and sociologists, Modern Histories approaches the history of crime and punishment not as the freestanding study of a distinct institution or body of legal doctrine, but as part of a broader inquiry into the webs of governance and control that constitute social and political life.
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This is a collection of essays critically examining the historical development of the modern criminal law.
Contents Contributors iii Introduction: Regarding Criminal Law Historically Markus D. Dubber and Lindsay Farmer 1 1. Character, Capacity, Outcome: Toward a Framework for Assessing the Shifting Pattern of Criminal Responsibility in Modern English Law Nicola Lacey 000 2. Criminal Responsibility and the Proof of Guilt Lindsay Farmer 000 3. "An Inducement to Morbid Minds": Politics and Madness in the Victorian Courtroom Joel Peter Eigen 000 4. The Meaning of Killing Guyora Binder 000 5. "An Extraordinarily Beautiful Document": Jefferson's Bill for Proportioning Crimes and Punishments and the Challenge of Republican Punishment Markus D. Dubber 000 6. The Myth of Private Prosecution in England, 1790-1850 Bruce P. Smith 000 7. Hans Litten and the Politics of Criminal Law in the Weimar Republic Benjamin Hett 000 8. Civilizing Darwin: Holmes on Criminal Law Gerry Leonard 000 9. Bodies, Words, Identities: The Moving Targets of the Criminal Law Mariana Valverde 000 10. Criminal Law at a Fault Line of Imperial Authority: Inter- Racial Homicide Trials in British India Martin Wiener 000 11. Crime and Punishment on the Tea Plantations of Colonial India Elizabeth Kolsky 000 12. "Enfeebling the Arm of Justice": Perjury and Prevarication in British India Wendie Ellen Schneider 000 Index
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"Intricacy and depth of scholarship... characterize the chapters. Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment has been a bracing intellectual excursion, and... I found each of the articles to range from interesting to fascinating."—Law and Politics Book Review
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780804754125
Publisert
2007-07-18
Utgiver
Vendor
Stanford University Press
Vekt
476 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Om bidragsyterne

Markus D. Dubber is Professor of Law and Director of the Buffalo Criminal Law Center at SUNY Buffalo School of Law. His books include The Police Power: Patriarchy and the Foundations of American Government (2005), The Sense of Justice: Empathy in Law and Punishment (2006), and The New Police Science: The Police Power in Domestic and International Governance (coedited with M. Valverde; Stanford, 2006).

Lindsay Farmer is Professor of Law at the University of Glasgow and author of Criminal Law, Tradition and Legal Order (1997), and The Trial on Trial (3 vols.) (coedited with R.A. Duff, V. Tadros, & S. Marshall, 2004-07).