Overarching views of crime and deviancy : rethinking the legacy of the Utrecht School /
"On October 1st 1934 Willem P.J. Pompe (1893-1968), Professor of Criminal Law at Utrecht University between 1928 and 1963, founded the 'Criminological Institute' (Criminologisch Instituut) within the Faculty of Law of Utrecht University. Pompe initiated a rather influential academic m...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
The Hague :
Eleven International Publishing,
[2015]
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Colección: | Pompe reeks ;
80. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Title page
- Contents
- Prologue
- 1 On this volume and the occasion of its publication
- 2 Introductory notes on the chapters in this volume
- 3 Some methodological notes and words of thanks
- Part I: Historical Relections on Criminal Law Scholarship, Forensic Psychiatry, and Criminology
- Chapter 1 Overarching Thought: Criminal Law Scholarship in Utrecht
- 1 Preliminary notes
- 2 Chronological characterization: a history of the Institute
- 3 Thematic characterization: three constants in criminal law scholarshipin Utrecht
- 4 Concluding observations.
- Chapter 2 The Boost of Forensic Psychiatry Embedded in Utrecht Cooperation
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Post-war expansion of forensic psychiatry
- 3 Connections between the university and the Observation Hospital
- 4 Research
- 5 Teaching forensic psychiatry
- 6 Developments
- Chapter 3 Criminology at the Willem Pompe Institute of Utrecht University: The First Fifty Years
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Criminography
- 3 Crime and religion (1938)
- 4 Criminal families in Utrecht (1940)
- 5 Female criminality (1940)
- 6 Dutch villages with a bad reputation
- 7 Rural-urban differentials in crime.
- 8 Social deviance and crime among immigrants in Amsterdam
- 9 Crime under foreign occupation
- 10 Teaching during the second criminology period at the Willem PompeInstitute: 1967-1988
- Chapter 4 Cultural Criminology Utrecht Style
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The cultural criminological roots
- 3 Cultural criminology in the polder
- 4 Criminology in Utrecht
- 5 Current criminological research at Utrecht
- 6 Future challenges
- Photographic Intermezzo
- Part II: Contemporary Issues in General Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure
- Chapter 5 Law Like Love
- 1 The Utrecht School.
- 2 The power of law
- 3 The ethics of conlict
- 4 Changing perspective(s) on mens rea
- 5 The rule of law
- 6 Law is the law
- Chapter 6 The 'Victim Paradigm' in (International)Criminal Justice
- 1 Introduction: a missed chance
- 2 Aspects of justice and criminal law
- 3 Victims, justice and international criminal law
- 4 Victims in the context of domestic criminal justice
- 5 Conclusions
- Chapter 7 'I Take You as my Lawfully Wedded Wife' Comparison and observations with regard to the penalization of forced marriages
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Framing forced marriages as a social problem.
- 3 The European standard
- 4 The Dutch legal discourse
- 5 The English legal discourse
- 6 The Dutch and English law in action
- 7 Some comparative observations
- 8 Conclusion
- Chapter 8 The Tolerance of Intolerance An evaluation of the scope of Articles 137c and 137d of the Dutch Criminal Code
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Article 10 ECHR: general framework
- 3 The two provisions in a nutshell
- 4 The case law discussed
- 5 Conclusion
- Chapter 9 Changing Ideas on Corporate Criminal Liability A comparison between the Netherlands and England and Wales
- 1 Introduction.