Distributive principles of criminal law : who should be punished how much? by Paul H. Robinson.
Material type: TextLanguage: Publication details: NewYork : Oxford university press, 2008.Description: 267 pISBN:- 9780195365757
- 345.04 ROB/DIS
Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | NLUO | NLUO | 345.04 ROB/DIS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 7267 |
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345.04 BRI/COR Corporate and white collar crime : | 345.04 ENG/ANT Anti-impunity and the human rights agenda | 345.04 GUP/DIS Dishonour of cheques : | 345.04 ROB/DIS Distributive principles of criminal law : | 345.05 BRO/CRI Criminal procedure : | 345.05 BUN/INT International criminal procedure | 345.05 CAR/INT International criminal procedure |
Chapter 1. Distributing criminal liability and punishment --
Chapter 2. The need for an articulated distributive principle --
Chapter 3. Does criminal law deter? --
Chapter 4. Deterrence as a distributive principle
Chapter 5. Rehabilitation
Chapter 6. Incapacitation of the dangerous
Chapter 7. Competing conceptions of desert : vengeful, deontological, and empirical
Chapter 8. The utility of desert
Chapter 9. Restorative justice
Chapter 10. The strengths & weaknesses of alternative Chapter Distributive principles
Chapter 12. Hybrid distributive principles
Chapter 13. A practical theory of justice : proposal for a hybrid distributive principle centered on empirical desert