The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
Herausgeber: Greenspan, Rosann; Simon, Jonathan; Aviram, Hadar
The Legal Process and the Promise of Justice
Herausgeber: Greenspan, Rosann; Simon, Jonathan; Aviram, Hadar
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Malcolm Feeley's classic scholarship on courts, criminal justice, legal reform, and the legal complex, examined by law and society scholars.
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Malcolm Feeley's classic scholarship on courts, criminal justice, legal reform, and the legal complex, examined by law and society scholars.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 402
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 731g
- ISBN-13: 9781108415682
- ISBN-10: 1108415687
- Artikelnr.: 53490910
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 402
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Mai 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 731g
- ISBN-13: 9781108415682
- ISBN-10: 1108415687
- Artikelnr.: 53490910
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction Jonathan Simon, Hadar Aviram and Rosann Greenspan; Part I. The
Process is the Punishment: 1. Adversarial bias and the criminal process:
infusing the organizational perspective on criminal courts with insights
from behavioral science Hadar Aviram; 2. Malcolm Feeley's concept of law
Issa Kohler-Hausmann; 3. Process as intergenerational punishment: are
children casualties of parental court experiences? Kay Levine and Volkan
Topalli; 4. The process is the problem Shauhin Talesh; Part II. Court
Reform on Trial: 5. Vaping on trial: e-cigarettes, law, and society Eric
Feldman; 6. Japanese court reform on trial David T. Johnson and Setsuo
Miyazawa; 7. Court reform and comparative criminal justice David Nelken; 8.
The birth of the penal organization: why prisons were born to fail Ashley
T. Rubin; 9. The misbegotten: infanticide in Victorian England Lawrence M.
Friedman; Part III. Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State: 10.
Judicial deference in the modern state Lauren B. Edelman; 11. Judges,
labor, and economic inequality Paul Frymer; 12. Administrative 'states' of
judicial policy on gender-motivated violence Christine B. Harrington; 13.
Can courts abolish mass incarceration? Jonathan Simon; 14. Policy making by
out-of-court settlements: intelligence informers at the Israeli High Court
of Justice Menachem Hofnung; Part IV. Political Liberalism and the Legal
Complex: 15. The international legal complex: Wang Yu and the global
response to repression of China's political lawyers Terence C. Halliday;
16. The legal profession's promise of justice: choices and challenges in
legal and socio-legal work Mark Fathi Massoud; 17. The varieties of
judicial independence and the judiciary's role in political reform Edward
L. Rubin; 18. The legal complex and lawyers-in-chief Kim Lane Scheppele.
Process is the Punishment: 1. Adversarial bias and the criminal process:
infusing the organizational perspective on criminal courts with insights
from behavioral science Hadar Aviram; 2. Malcolm Feeley's concept of law
Issa Kohler-Hausmann; 3. Process as intergenerational punishment: are
children casualties of parental court experiences? Kay Levine and Volkan
Topalli; 4. The process is the problem Shauhin Talesh; Part II. Court
Reform on Trial: 5. Vaping on trial: e-cigarettes, law, and society Eric
Feldman; 6. Japanese court reform on trial David T. Johnson and Setsuo
Miyazawa; 7. Court reform and comparative criminal justice David Nelken; 8.
The birth of the penal organization: why prisons were born to fail Ashley
T. Rubin; 9. The misbegotten: infanticide in Victorian England Lawrence M.
Friedman; Part III. Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State: 10.
Judicial deference in the modern state Lauren B. Edelman; 11. Judges,
labor, and economic inequality Paul Frymer; 12. Administrative 'states' of
judicial policy on gender-motivated violence Christine B. Harrington; 13.
Can courts abolish mass incarceration? Jonathan Simon; 14. Policy making by
out-of-court settlements: intelligence informers at the Israeli High Court
of Justice Menachem Hofnung; Part IV. Political Liberalism and the Legal
Complex: 15. The international legal complex: Wang Yu and the global
response to repression of China's political lawyers Terence C. Halliday;
16. The legal profession's promise of justice: choices and challenges in
legal and socio-legal work Mark Fathi Massoud; 17. The varieties of
judicial independence and the judiciary's role in political reform Edward
L. Rubin; 18. The legal complex and lawyers-in-chief Kim Lane Scheppele.
Introduction Jonathan Simon, Hadar Aviram and Rosann Greenspan; Part I. The
Process is the Punishment: 1. Adversarial bias and the criminal process:
infusing the organizational perspective on criminal courts with insights
from behavioral science Hadar Aviram; 2. Malcolm Feeley's concept of law
Issa Kohler-Hausmann; 3. Process as intergenerational punishment: are
children casualties of parental court experiences? Kay Levine and Volkan
Topalli; 4. The process is the problem Shauhin Talesh; Part II. Court
Reform on Trial: 5. Vaping on trial: e-cigarettes, law, and society Eric
Feldman; 6. Japanese court reform on trial David T. Johnson and Setsuo
Miyazawa; 7. Court reform and comparative criminal justice David Nelken; 8.
The birth of the penal organization: why prisons were born to fail Ashley
T. Rubin; 9. The misbegotten: infanticide in Victorian England Lawrence M.
Friedman; Part III. Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State: 10.
Judicial deference in the modern state Lauren B. Edelman; 11. Judges,
labor, and economic inequality Paul Frymer; 12. Administrative 'states' of
judicial policy on gender-motivated violence Christine B. Harrington; 13.
Can courts abolish mass incarceration? Jonathan Simon; 14. Policy making by
out-of-court settlements: intelligence informers at the Israeli High Court
of Justice Menachem Hofnung; Part IV. Political Liberalism and the Legal
Complex: 15. The international legal complex: Wang Yu and the global
response to repression of China's political lawyers Terence C. Halliday;
16. The legal profession's promise of justice: choices and challenges in
legal and socio-legal work Mark Fathi Massoud; 17. The varieties of
judicial independence and the judiciary's role in political reform Edward
L. Rubin; 18. The legal complex and lawyers-in-chief Kim Lane Scheppele.
Process is the Punishment: 1. Adversarial bias and the criminal process:
infusing the organizational perspective on criminal courts with insights
from behavioral science Hadar Aviram; 2. Malcolm Feeley's concept of law
Issa Kohler-Hausmann; 3. Process as intergenerational punishment: are
children casualties of parental court experiences? Kay Levine and Volkan
Topalli; 4. The process is the problem Shauhin Talesh; Part II. Court
Reform on Trial: 5. Vaping on trial: e-cigarettes, law, and society Eric
Feldman; 6. Japanese court reform on trial David T. Johnson and Setsuo
Miyazawa; 7. Court reform and comparative criminal justice David Nelken; 8.
The birth of the penal organization: why prisons were born to fail Ashley
T. Rubin; 9. The misbegotten: infanticide in Victorian England Lawrence M.
Friedman; Part III. Judicial Policymaking and the Modern State: 10.
Judicial deference in the modern state Lauren B. Edelman; 11. Judges,
labor, and economic inequality Paul Frymer; 12. Administrative 'states' of
judicial policy on gender-motivated violence Christine B. Harrington; 13.
Can courts abolish mass incarceration? Jonathan Simon; 14. Policy making by
out-of-court settlements: intelligence informers at the Israeli High Court
of Justice Menachem Hofnung; Part IV. Political Liberalism and the Legal
Complex: 15. The international legal complex: Wang Yu and the global
response to repression of China's political lawyers Terence C. Halliday;
16. The legal profession's promise of justice: choices and challenges in
legal and socio-legal work Mark Fathi Massoud; 17. The varieties of
judicial independence and the judiciary's role in political reform Edward
L. Rubin; 18. The legal complex and lawyers-in-chief Kim Lane Scheppele.