Crime and Punishment, two sides in the eternal carousel. They always haunt the minds of men. The eternal source of inspiration, fear and emotions. who has the right to determine what is sufficient redress? Time of duels and mass shootings is behind us. The world has turned to the struggle to find a way to reintegrate penalized in our ranks. But how far have we come on this way? We are starting from the crucial theoretical question: whether punishment is generally motivated by inequity aversion or by a desire for reciprocity ...
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Crime and Punishment, two sides in the eternal carousel. They always haunt the minds of men. The eternal source of inspiration, fear and emotions. who has the right to determine what is sufficient redress? Time of duels and mass shootings is behind us. The world has turned to the struggle to find a way to reintegrate penalized in our ranks. But how far have we come on this way? We are starting from the crucial theoretical question: whether punishment is generally motivated by inequity aversion or by a desire for reciprocity? An interesting study in Chapter 1. of this book shows that punishment is motivated by a simple desire to reciprocally harm. This would mean that society is punishing to prevent individual revenge and not to restore the balance that has been lost through violating social norms and rights. Ultimately the oldest principle in law is "Eye for an eye." But, in the chapter two we will pay attention to the views of the profession, from the perspective of Indian Lawyers. There are four mayor legal theories concerning crime and punishment, four possible approaches. But, maybe it is not all in people wanting to break rules, after the theoretical section you will read more about the influence of genetics impacts, the basic assumption of free will in criminal law, it can prove that one's actions were not motivated by oneself but by hereditary factors. Someone can be said to have acted out of free will. This significantly reduces the space for punishment. Wherever human activity exist there is misconduct. In Chapter 3. researchers are trying to present these rates in Low and Middle-Income countries because the majority of studies is reflecting the problems of high developed states and then transferring conclusions on others. The fact is that each culture carries its own rules. If you want to know this area you have to look into every corner of the world. Chapter 4. presents a new model of Criminal Justice that combines aspects of adversarial, restorative, social, and transformative justice frameworks. The resulting "intersectional criminal justice" offers a holistic harm-reduction model that moves the focus of our criminal justice system away from "rough justice" and towards collective restorative healing. It is not enough just to punish some individual. Modern world needs a positive social change. Various late nineteenth century rationalities considered the fine as a justifiable punishment. Therefore, they supported extending its application by making it affordable for people on low incomes, which meant imprisonment for fine default could mostly be avoided without undermining the end of punishment. Chaper 5. investigates the historical development of the penal fine as well as the changing forms of this penalty in Western European Criminal systems from the end of the eighteenth century until the late nineteenth century. While Chapter 6. considers the continuum of possibilities for including the public from the gratuitous exploitation of the public voice by populists and media entrepreneurs using top-of-the-head opinion polls through to informed public opinion, public consultation process and ultimately the democratization of sentencing policy. This is a refreshing attitude but the big question is whether society is ready for it. In any case, the most serious form of punishment is death penalty. Debates against the death penalty are lasting for tens of years. Everyone has their own opinion in this field. How to sanction the most serious crimes? Chaper 8. looks at the opinions of Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement Students on the capital punishment and you can see that they are also divided. Chapter 9 brings the look on the middle decades of the past century. The idea: rehabilitate, teadjust and change was born and people started thinking on not just to punish but what will happen when the time in prison is over. Follows the story whether implementation of a crime control model (based, in part, on the concepts of COMPST
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Add this copy of Crime and Punishment to cart. $108.44, new condition, Sold by discount_scientific_books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Sterling Heights, MI, UNITED STATES, published 2016 by Delve Publishing.
Add this copy of Crime and Punishment to cart. $163.77, new condition, Sold by Media Smart rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hawthorne, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2016 by Delve Publishing.