Buch, Englisch, 448 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 940 g
Buch, Englisch, 448 Seiten, Format (B × H): 175 mm x 250 mm, Gewicht: 940 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-967361-2
Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)
Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law presents essays in which scholars from various countries and legal systems engage critically with formative texts in criminal legal thought since Hobbes. It examines the emergence of a transnational canon of criminal law by documenting its intellectual and disciplinary history and provides a snapshot of contemporary work on criminal law within that historical and comparative context.
Criminal law discourse has become, and will continue to become, more international and comparative, and in this sense global: the long-standing parochialism of criminal law scholarship and doctrine is giving way to a broad exploration of the foundations of modern criminal law. The present book advances this promising scholarly and doctrinal project by making available key texts, including several not previously available in English translation, from the common law and civil law traditions, accompanied by contributions from leading representatives of both systems.
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Weitere Infos & Material
- Introduction
- 1.: Alice Ristroph: Hobbes on "Diffidence" and the Criminal Law
- 2.: Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments:A Mirror on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law
- 3.: Blackstone's Criminal Law: Common-Law Harmonization and Legislative Reform
- 4.: Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon: Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation
- 5.: Dignity, Crime, and Punishment: A Kantian Perspective
- 6.: PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common Penal Law
- 7.: The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's Rechtsphilosophie
- 8.: Mill's On Liberty and the Modern "Harm to Others" Principle
- 9.: James Fitzjames Stephen: The Punishment Jurist
- 10.: Pashukanis and Public Protection
- 11.: Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty
- 12.: The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the Alegitimacy of American Penality
- 13.: The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
- 14.: The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and Responsibility
- 15.: Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device: The Contribution of Gary Becker
- 16.: Foucault, Criminal Law, and the Governmentalization of the State
- 17.: Nils Christie: "Conflicts as Property"
- 18.: Günther Jakobs's Feindstrafrecht: A Dispassionate Account
- Appendix A.: Textbook of the Common Penal Law in Force in Germany
- Appendix B.: Concerning the Need for a Right Violation in the Concept of a Crime, having particular Regard to the Concept of an Affront to Honour
- Appendix C.: The Origin of Criminal Law in the Status of the Unfree
- Appendix D.: On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law




