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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Hobbes on “Diffidence” and the Criminal Law
- 2 Beccaria’s On Crimes and Punishments
- 3 Blackstone’s Criminal Law
- 4 Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon
- 5 Dignity, Crime, and Punishment
- 6 PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common Penal Law
- 7 The Contraction of Crime in Hegel’s Rechtsphilosophie
- 8 Mill’s On Liberty and the Modern “Harm to Others” Principle
- 9 James Fitzjames Stephen
- 10 Pashukanis and Public Protection
- 11 Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal Law
- 12 The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the Alegitimacy of American Penality
- 13 The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
- 14 The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility
- 15 Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device
- 16 Foucault, Criminal Law, and the Governmentalization of the State
- 17 Nils Christie
- 18 Günther Jakobs’s Feindstrafrecht
- Appendix A Textbook of the Common Penal Law in Force in Germany*
- Appendix B 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 The Origin of Criminal Law in the Status of the Unfree*
- Appendix D On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law*
- Index
(p.415) Appendix D On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law*
(p.415) Appendix D On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law*
- Source:
- Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgments
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction
- 1 Hobbes on “Diffidence” and the Criminal Law
- 2 Beccaria’s On Crimes and Punishments
- 3 Blackstone’s Criminal Law
- 4 Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon
- 5 Dignity, Crime, and Punishment
- 6 PJA von Feuerbach and his Textbook of the Common Penal Law
- 7 The Contraction of Crime in Hegel’s Rechtsphilosophie
- 8 Mill’s On Liberty and the Modern “Harm to Others” Principle
- 9 James Fitzjames Stephen
- 10 Pashukanis and Public Protection
- 11 Radbruch on the Origins of the Criminal Law
- 12 The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the Alegitimacy of American Penality
- 13 The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams
- 14 The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart’s Punishment and Responsibility
- 15 Criminal Law as an Efficiency-Enhancing Device
- 16 Foucault, Criminal Law, and the Governmentalization of the State
- 17 Nils Christie
- 18 Günther Jakobs’s Feindstrafrecht
- Appendix A Textbook of the Common Penal Law in Force in Germany*
- Appendix B 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 The Origin of Criminal Law in the Status of the Unfree*
- Appendix D On the Theory of Enemy Criminal Law*
- Index