توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Legal Violence and the Limits of the Law
نام کتاب : Legal Violence and the Limits of the Law
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : خشونت قانونی و محدودیت های قانون
سری :
نویسندگان : Amy Swiffen (editor), Joshua Nichols (editor)
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2017
تعداد صفحات : 207
ISBN (شابک) : 2017010410 , 9781317602101
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 9 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover\nHalf Title\nTitle Page\nCopyright Page\nTable of contents\nFigures\nContributors\nPreface\nAcknowledgments\nChapter 1 “It’s not just a good idea, it’s the law”: Rationality, force, and changing minds\n Changing minds\n Force of law\n Minds\n Essentially contested\n Concluding remarks\n Notes\n References\nChapter 2 Cruel and thus not unusual: Jacques Derrida’s seminar on the death penalty\n Notes\n References\nChapter 3 The violent rhetoric of accusation: Cicero and the Marcus Ameleus Scaurus case\n The Scaurus case\n Accusation, crime and standing courts in the late Roman Republic\n Criminal accusation in action\n The accuser’s “violent” oratory\n The accused and the “nature” of accusation\n Concluding musings\n Note\n References\nChapter 4 The colonialism of incarceration\n I\n II\n III\n IV\n V\n Notes\n References\nChapter 5 “Ran away from her master … a negroe girl named Thursday”: Examining evidence of punishment, isolation, and ...\n Content, function, and circulation: reading fugitive slave advertisements\n Grappling with a colonial archive\n An infrastructure of violence: print technology and gaols (jails)\n Fugitive slaves in the Halifax Work House, 1790\n Fugitive slave advertisements as evidence of corporal punishment and psychic abuse\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 6 The work of death: Massacre and retribution in Southampton County, Virginia, August 1831\n Three days in August\n Massacre\n Insurrection\n “That place”\n The usual place\n The radiance of justice\n Notes\n References\nChapter 7 Civilizing missions and humanitarian interventions: Into the laws and territories of First Nations\n Introduction\n Kaldowinyeri is law\n From violence to recognition\n Violence by other names\n Different laws—different origins\n First Nations’ ongoing experience of cruel and unusual violence\n Concluding remarks\n Notes\n References\nChapter 8 The rhetoric of abolition: Continuity and change in the struggle against America’s death penalty, 1900–2010\n Introduction\n Texas\n Connecticut\n Kansas\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 9 “Too wicked to die”: The enduring legacy of humane reforms to solitary confinement\n Introduction\n The CSC’s contemporary reliance on segregation\n Confining the individual: producing the human\n Historical underpinnings: contemporary continuity\n Cruel and unusual: the limits of rights-based litigation and policy reforms\n Segregation: the CSC’s approach to difficult-to-manage-women\n Segregation and homicide: Ashley Smith’s death and the CSC’s commitment to isolation\n Ontological violations: ethical implications\n Conclusion\n Note\n References\nChapter 10 Non-violent communion versus medieval ships of fools: Engaged citizenry alternatives to Europe’s war ...\n Introduction\n A survey of EU and Member State policies toward Syrian refugees\n Another way to relate to and with refugees\n Refugees as agents not subjects\n Closing remarks\n Notes\n References\nIndex