Foundational Texts in Modern Criminal Law
Edited by Markus D Dubber
Table of Contents
Introduction: Grounding Criminal Law: Foundational Texts in Comparative-Historical Perspective, Markus D Dubber
1. 'Diffidence' and the Criminal Law, Alice Ristroph
2. Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments: A Mirror on the History of the Foundations of Modern Criminal Law, Bernard E Harcourt
3. William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, Vol. 4 (1769), Simon Stern
4. Foundations of the Legislative Panopticon: Bentham's Principles of Morals and Legislation, Guyora Binder
5. Dignity, Crime, and Punishment, Meir Dan-Cohen
6. Paul Johann Anselm von Feuerbach and his Impact on Contemporary Criminal Law, Tatjana Hornle
7. The Contraction of Crime in Hegel's Rechtsphilosophie, Alan Brudner
8. John Stuart Mill, On Liberty (1859), Bernard Harcourt
9. The Punishment Jurist, Marc O DeGirolami
10. Pashukanis and Public Protection, Peter Ramsay
11. Origins of the Criminal Law: Punitive Interventions before Sovereignty, Mireille Hildebrandt
12. The Model Penal Code, Legal Process, and the Alegitimacy of American Penality, Markus D Dubber
13. The Modest Ambition of Glanville Williams, Lindsay Farmer
14. The Radical Orthodoxy of Hart's Punishment and Responsibility, Malcolm Thorburn
15. Gary Becker and Criminal Law, Alon Harel
16. Foucault, Criminal Law, and the Governmentalization of the State, Pat O'Malley and Mariana Valverde
17. Nils Christie: 'Conflicts as Property', Vidar Halvorsen
18. Feindstrafrecht, Daniel Ohana
Appendix
Feuerbach
Birnbaum
Radbruch
Jakobs