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Produktbild: Liberal Criminal Theory

Liberal Criminal Theory Essays for Andreas von Hirsch

57,99 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., Versandkostenfrei


Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

15.12.2016

Herausgeber

A. P. Simester + weitere

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

408

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2,3 cm

Gewicht

617 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5099-1387-9

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

15.12.2016

Herausgeber

Verlag

Hart Publishing

Seitenzahl

408

Maße (L/B/H)

23,4/15,6/2,3 cm

Gewicht

617 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-1-5099-1387-9

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Liberal Criminal Theory
  • Part 1: Punishment and Prevention
    1. Punishment Paradigms and the Role of the Preventive State Andrew Ashworth and Lucia Zedner
    I. The Role of Prudential Disincentives
    II. The Scope of the State's Authority to Censure
    III. The State's Preventive Obligation
    IV. Developing the Preventive Obligation
    V. Conclusion 2. Prevention, Censure and Responsibility: The Recent Debate on the Purposes of Punishment* Claus Roxin 23
    I. Overcoming the Simple Contrast between Two Strands of Theories?
    II. The Shortcomings of Traditional 'Absolute' and 'Relative' Theories of Punishment
    III. Principled Limits on Punishment, Guilt and Censure
    IV. Why Must the Perpetrator Allow Himself to be Roped in for the Achievement of the State's Preventive Aims?
    V. On the Expressive Function of Punishment
    VI. Conclusion
    3. Prevention with a Moral Voice JR Edwards and AP Simester
    I. Reconciling Desert and Deterrence
    II. Respecting Persons: Hegel and the Moral Voice
    III. Not Treating People as Means
    IV. Conclusion
    4. The 'Deserved' Punishment* Ulfrid Neumann
    I. 'Effective' versus 'Deserved' Punishment: a Hypothetical Scenario
    II. The Deserved Punishment: an Essential Component of 'Absolute' (Deontological) Theories of Punishment
    III. The Deserved Punishment in Complex ('Unified') Theories of Punishment
    IV. The Culpability Principle: Ways towards its Recognition within a Theory of Punishment
    V. The Culpability Principle as an Integral Component of the Institution of Punishment
    VI. Punishment as Reaction and as Retribution
    Part 2: Punishment, Desert and Communication
    5. After the Crime: Post-Offence Conduct and Penal Censure Julian V Roberts and Hannah Maslen
    I. Introduction
    II. Defining Post-Offence-related Conduct
    III. Justifying the Mitigating Role of Commendable POC: An Offence-seriousness Approach
    IV. A More Expansive Account of the Normative Value of POC: Censure and Broader Retributive Values
    V. Some External Objections to POC as a Sentencing Factor
    VI. Conclusions
    6. Does Punishment Honour the Offender?* Kurt Seelmann
    I. Overview
    II. Reprobation and Treatment as a 'Moral Agent', ie as a Participant in Moral Discourse
    III. Punishment as Honouring the Offender in German Idealist Philosophy
    IV. What are the Differences between Strawson and the German Idealists with respect to the Function of Penal Censure?
    V. Imputation and the Person prior to Idealism: Attribution of Responsibility as a way of Taking Identity Seriously
    VI. Criticising this Tradition with Assistance from Hegel? (The Case of Forgiveness)
    7. Criminal Law, Crime and Punishment as Communication Klaus Günther
    I. Punishment: From Welfare Instrumentalism to Moral Expressivism
    II. The Communicative Turn
    III. Punishment as Communication
    IV. What does the Crime Say?
    V. What does the Criminal Law Say?
    VI. Why Hard Treatment?
    VII. Communication as an Action
    VIII. Again: Punishment as Communication
    8. Can Deserts Be Just in an Unjust World Michael Tonry
    I. Recognition of the 'Unjust World' Problem
    II. Deep Disadvantage and Criminal Behaviour
    III. Deep Disadvantage as an Excuse or Mitigation
    IV. Social Adversity in Mitigation
    V. A Celebration
    Part 3: Rechtsgüter, Harm and Offence in Criminalisation 9. 'Rights of Others' in Criminalisation Theory Tatjana Hörnle
    I. Strengths and Weaknesses of the Harm Principle
    II. Legal Moralism as the Only Alternative?
    III. The Tasks of Law
    IV. The Concept of 'Rights'
    V. Legal Rights Claims versus Moral Rights
    VI. A Final Remark
    10. The Harm Principle and the Protection of 'Legal Goods' (Rechtsgüterschutz): a German Perspective* Winfried Hassemer
    I. Dedication
    II. Harm Orientations through the Doctrine of Legal Goods and the Harm Principle
    III. Aims of the Harm-Orientation Doctrines
    IV. Limits
    11. 'Remote Harms' and the Two Harm Principles RA Duff and SE Marshall
    I. The Two Harm Principles
    II. Remote Harms and the Harmful Conduct Principle
    III. The Harm Prevention Principle and Regulatory Offences
    IV. Why Should We Obey?
    12. Using 'Quality of Life' to Legitimate Criminal Law Intervention: Gauging Gravity, Defining Disorder Nina Persak
    I. Assessing Harm
    II. Developing a Quality of Life Conception of Harm
    III. Application of the Model in Different Cultural Settings
    IV. Quality of Life in Defining and Regulating Disorder? Distinction from Security Discourses
    V. Concluding Thoughts
    13. Criminal Liability for Offensive Behaviour in Public Spaces* Wolfgang Wohlers
    I. Searching for Standards of Legitimate Criminal Legislation
    II. Concluding Remarks
    Part 4: Criminal Justice in a Liberal State
    14. Can Punishment Be Just?* Bernd Schünemann
    I. The Three Levels of Penal Justice
    II. A Penal Theory fit for Contemporary European Culture
    III. Just Punishment Requires a Just Demarcation of Criminal Conduct
    IV. The Requirements of Penal Justice Regarding the Structure of the Criminal Trial
    V. Concluding Remarks
    15. Punishment and the Ends of Policing John Kleinig
    I. Is Punishment Ever a Legitimate Police Function?
    II. The Criminal Justice System
    III. The Police Role (or the Ends of Policing)
    IV. Police and Punishment
    V. Conclusion
    16. The Place of Criminal Law Theory in the Constitutional State Antje du Bois-Pedain
    I. Criminal Law Theory in German Constitutional Jurisprudence
    II. Shaping the Interface between Constitutional Law and Penal Theory through a Constitutional 'Right not to be Punished'? The Limited Potential of Constitutional Incorporation
    III. What Penal Theory has to Offer Law and Practice in a Constitutional State
    IV. Concluding Remarks
    17. Criminal Law Theory and the Limits of Liberalism Paul Roberts
    I. Questioning the Liberal Consensus in Contemporary
    Criminal Law Theory
    II. Liberal Political Morality, in Miniature
    III. Liberal Criminal Law Theory for Liberals
    IV. Two Theoretical Limitations: Incompleteness and Indeterminacy V. From Liberal Criminal Law Theory to Cosmopolitan Criminal Jurisprudence