This book considers the governmental rationalities behind the use of money sanctions; how governance through money sanctions disseminates in consumer societies; and implications for crime control strategy.
This book considers the governmental rationalities behind the use of money sanctions; how governance through money sanctions disseminates in consumer societies; and implications for crime control strategy.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Patricia Faraldo Cabana is Professor for Criminal Law at the University of A Coruña, in Spain, and Adjunct Professor at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1. Making offenders pay 2. The fine as the ideal penal sanction in the age of the Enlightenment 3. The impersonality of money: why and how fines paid by an innocent third party were prohibited 4. The unequal distribution of money and the (un)fairness of fines: why and how fines were made affordable 5. The expansion of the fine in the twentieth century 6. The triumph of the day-fine system? National perspectives and comparative approaches 7. What next?
Preface 1. Making offenders pay 2. The fine as the ideal penal sanction in the age of the Enlightenment 3. The impersonality of money: why and how fines paid by an innocent third party were prohibited 4. The unequal distribution of money and the (un)fairness of fines: why and how fines were made affordable 5. The expansion of the fine in the twentieth century 6. The triumph of the day-fine system? National perspectives and comparative approaches 7. What next?
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