Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law
Herausgeber: Dubber, Markus D
Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law
Herausgeber: Dubber, Markus D
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This volume contributes to the emergence of a transnational canon of criminal law by critically engaging with formative texts in criminal legal thought since Hobbes.
This volume contributes to the emergence of a transnational canon of criminal law by critically engaging with formative texts in criminal legal thought since Hobbes.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 178mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9780199673629
- ISBN-10: 0199673624
- Artikelnr.: 52404408
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 448
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 178mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9780199673629
- ISBN-10: 0199673624
- Artikelnr.: 52404408
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Markus D Dubber is Professor of Law at the University of Toronto. Dubber's scholarship has focused on theoretical, comparative, and historical aspects of criminal law. His publications include Criminal Law: A Comparative Approach (co-authored with Tatjana Hörnle, 2014), Handbook of Comparative Criminal Law (co-edited with Kevin Heller, 2010), Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment (co-edited with Lindsay Farmer, 2007), The New Police Science: The Police Power in Domestic and International Governance (co-edited with Mariana Valverde, 2006), The Police Power: Patriarchy and the Foundations of American Government (2005), and Victims in the War on Crime: The Use and Abuse of Victims' Rights (2002).
* Introduction. Grounding Criminal Law: Foundational Texts in
Comparative-Historical Perspective
* 1.: Alice Ristroph: Hobbes on "Diffidence" and the Criminal Law
* 2.: Bernard E Harcourt: Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments:A Mirror
on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law
* 3.: Simon Stern: Blackstone's Criminal Law: Common-Law Harmonization
and Legislative Reform
* 4.: Guyora Binder: Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon:
Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation
* 5.: Meir Dan-Cohen: Dignity, Crime, and Punishment: A Kantian
Perspective
* 6.: Tatjana Hörnle: PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common
Penal Law
* 7.: Alan Brudner: The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's
Rechtsphilosophie
* 8.: Bernard E Harcourt: Mill's On Liberty and the Modern "Harm to
Others" Principle
* 9.: Marc O DeGirolami: James Fitzjames Stephen: The Punishment Jurist
* 10.: Peter Ramsay: Pashukanis and Public Protection
* 11.: Mireille Hildebrandt: Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal
Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty
* 12.: Markus D Dubber: The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the
Alegitimacy of American Penality
* 13.: Lindsay Farmer: The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
* 14.: Malcolm Thorburn: The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and
Responsibility
* 15.: Alon Harel: Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device: The
Contribution of Gary Becker
* 16.: Pat O'Malley and Mariana Valverde: Foucault, Criminal Law, and
the Governmentalization of the State
* 17.: Vidar Halvorsen: Nils Christie: "Conflicts as Property"
* 18.: Daniel Ohana: Günther Jakobs's Feindstrafrecht: A Dispassionate
Account
* Appendix A.: Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach: Textbook of the Common
Penal Law in Force in Germany
* Appendix B.: Johann Michael Franz Birnbaum: 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.: Gustav Radbruch: The Origin of Criminal Law in the
Status of the Unfree
* Appendix D.: Günther Jakobs: On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law
Comparative-Historical Perspective
* 1.: Alice Ristroph: Hobbes on "Diffidence" and the Criminal Law
* 2.: Bernard E Harcourt: Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments:A Mirror
on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law
* 3.: Simon Stern: Blackstone's Criminal Law: Common-Law Harmonization
and Legislative Reform
* 4.: Guyora Binder: Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon:
Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation
* 5.: Meir Dan-Cohen: Dignity, Crime, and Punishment: A Kantian
Perspective
* 6.: Tatjana Hörnle: PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common
Penal Law
* 7.: Alan Brudner: The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's
Rechtsphilosophie
* 8.: Bernard E Harcourt: Mill's On Liberty and the Modern "Harm to
Others" Principle
* 9.: Marc O DeGirolami: James Fitzjames Stephen: The Punishment Jurist
* 10.: Peter Ramsay: Pashukanis and Public Protection
* 11.: Mireille Hildebrandt: Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal
Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty
* 12.: Markus D Dubber: The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the
Alegitimacy of American Penality
* 13.: Lindsay Farmer: The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
* 14.: Malcolm Thorburn: The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and
Responsibility
* 15.: Alon Harel: Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device: The
Contribution of Gary Becker
* 16.: Pat O'Malley and Mariana Valverde: Foucault, Criminal Law, and
the Governmentalization of the State
* 17.: Vidar Halvorsen: Nils Christie: "Conflicts as Property"
* 18.: Daniel Ohana: Günther Jakobs's Feindstrafrecht: A Dispassionate
Account
* Appendix A.: Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach: Textbook of the Common
Penal Law in Force in Germany
* Appendix B.: Johann Michael Franz Birnbaum: 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.: Gustav Radbruch: The Origin of Criminal Law in the
Status of the Unfree
* Appendix D.: Günther Jakobs: On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law
* Introduction. Grounding Criminal Law: Foundational Texts in
Comparative-Historical Perspective
* 1.: Alice Ristroph: Hobbes on "Diffidence" and the Criminal Law
* 2.: Bernard E Harcourt: Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments:A Mirror
on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law
* 3.: Simon Stern: Blackstone's Criminal Law: Common-Law Harmonization
and Legislative Reform
* 4.: Guyora Binder: Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon:
Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation
* 5.: Meir Dan-Cohen: Dignity, Crime, and Punishment: A Kantian
Perspective
* 6.: Tatjana Hörnle: PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common
Penal Law
* 7.: Alan Brudner: The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's
Rechtsphilosophie
* 8.: Bernard E Harcourt: Mill's On Liberty and the Modern "Harm to
Others" Principle
* 9.: Marc O DeGirolami: James Fitzjames Stephen: The Punishment Jurist
* 10.: Peter Ramsay: Pashukanis and Public Protection
* 11.: Mireille Hildebrandt: Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal
Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty
* 12.: Markus D Dubber: The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the
Alegitimacy of American Penality
* 13.: Lindsay Farmer: The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
* 14.: Malcolm Thorburn: The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and
Responsibility
* 15.: Alon Harel: Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device: The
Contribution of Gary Becker
* 16.: Pat O'Malley and Mariana Valverde: Foucault, Criminal Law, and
the Governmentalization of the State
* 17.: Vidar Halvorsen: Nils Christie: "Conflicts as Property"
* 18.: Daniel Ohana: Günther Jakobs's Feindstrafrecht: A Dispassionate
Account
* Appendix A.: Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach: Textbook of the Common
Penal Law in Force in Germany
* Appendix B.: Johann Michael Franz Birnbaum: 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.: Gustav Radbruch: The Origin of Criminal Law in the
Status of the Unfree
* Appendix D.: Günther Jakobs: On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law
Comparative-Historical Perspective
* 1.: Alice Ristroph: Hobbes on "Diffidence" and the Criminal Law
* 2.: Bernard E Harcourt: Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments:A Mirror
on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law
* 3.: Simon Stern: Blackstone's Criminal Law: Common-Law Harmonization
and Legislative Reform
* 4.: Guyora Binder: Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon:
Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation
* 5.: Meir Dan-Cohen: Dignity, Crime, and Punishment: A Kantian
Perspective
* 6.: Tatjana Hörnle: PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common
Penal Law
* 7.: Alan Brudner: The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's
Rechtsphilosophie
* 8.: Bernard E Harcourt: Mill's On Liberty and the Modern "Harm to
Others" Principle
* 9.: Marc O DeGirolami: James Fitzjames Stephen: The Punishment Jurist
* 10.: Peter Ramsay: Pashukanis and Public Protection
* 11.: Mireille Hildebrandt: Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal
Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty
* 12.: Markus D Dubber: The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the
Alegitimacy of American Penality
* 13.: Lindsay Farmer: The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
* 14.: Malcolm Thorburn: The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and
Responsibility
* 15.: Alon Harel: Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device: The
Contribution of Gary Becker
* 16.: Pat O'Malley and Mariana Valverde: Foucault, Criminal Law, and
the Governmentalization of the State
* 17.: Vidar Halvorsen: Nils Christie: "Conflicts as Property"
* 18.: Daniel Ohana: Günther Jakobs's Feindstrafrecht: A Dispassionate
Account
* Appendix A.: Paul Johann Anselm Feuerbach: Textbook of the Common
Penal Law in Force in Germany
* Appendix B.: Johann Michael Franz Birnbaum: 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.: Gustav Radbruch: The Origin of Criminal Law in the
Status of the Unfree
* Appendix D.: Günther Jakobs: On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law