Justice, Mercy, and Caprice: Clemency and the Death Penalty in Ireland: Clarendon Studies in Criminology
Autor Ian O'Donnellen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 noi 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198798477
ISBN-10: 0198798474
Pagini: 330
Dimensiuni: 149 x 224 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Clarendon Studies in Criminology
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198798474
Pagini: 330
Dimensiuni: 149 x 224 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Seria Clarendon Studies in Criminology
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
... meticulous evaluation of primary sources ... an authoritative account of clemency in Ireland ... raises important questions about the role of gender in the adjudication of punishment ... This book will be useful to legal scholars, historians, sociologists, criminologists, abolitionists, and any laypeople who seek to drive their home countries away from practices rooted in cruelty and caprice, and towards policies rooted in justice and mercy.
While this is a serious academic book, informed by criminological theory and wider socio-legal scholarship, the stories that O'Donnell uncovers, and describes in exquisite detail, could engage an audience beyond the academy ... This book is a pleasure to read. O'Donnell is skilled at weaving an engaging narrative from his rich empirical data ... A close reading of the text is repaid with some wonderful nuggets of detail, often hidden in footnotes, but together presenting a rich tapestry of clemency decision-making ... His critical lens zooms in to provide thick description of key variables in the cases that might account for clemency decisions, and then draws back to a wide angle to explicate the cultural, political, and legal factors that influenced decision-making. This makes for a beautifully produced monograph that deserves to be widely read.
...fascinating, thought-provoking ... original, consistently challenging, and sites Ireland's history in the wider world of imprisonment and punishment history ... [a] model for future work.
... a masterful study ... a fine overview of the law and practice of capital punishment over the past century ... a compelling, thoughtful and extremely well-researched contribution with the potential to influence debates elsewhere in the world.
In analysing the factors that led to the exercise of clemency and its aftermath, O'Donnell's extensive research sheds light on the exercise of State power in Ireland and the potent mix of politics, chivalry, morality and deference over time.
... an exemplar of methodological rigour and literary verve ... O'Donnell's exhaustive research pierces the opaque operation of clemency. He delivers on his commitment to grasping the legal, political, and societal setting of clemency in order to understand it. The author has a special knack for zooming in and out when relating historical detail and the book is superbly written ... of great value to every researcher of clemency, no matter what their discipline or location
While this is a serious academic book, informed by criminological theory and wider socio-legal scholarship, the stories that O'Donnell uncovers, and describes in exquisite detail, could engage an audience beyond the academy ... This book is a pleasure to read. O'Donnell is skilled at weaving an engaging narrative from his rich empirical data ... A close reading of the text is repaid with some wonderful nuggets of detail, often hidden in footnotes, but together presenting a rich tapestry of clemency decision-making ... His critical lens zooms in to provide thick description of key variables in the cases that might account for clemency decisions, and then draws back to a wide angle to explicate the cultural, political, and legal factors that influenced decision-making. This makes for a beautifully produced monograph that deserves to be widely read.
...fascinating, thought-provoking ... original, consistently challenging, and sites Ireland's history in the wider world of imprisonment and punishment history ... [a] model for future work.
... a masterful study ... a fine overview of the law and practice of capital punishment over the past century ... a compelling, thoughtful and extremely well-researched contribution with the potential to influence debates elsewhere in the world.
In analysing the factors that led to the exercise of clemency and its aftermath, O'Donnell's extensive research sheds light on the exercise of State power in Ireland and the potent mix of politics, chivalry, morality and deference over time.
... an exemplar of methodological rigour and literary verve ... O'Donnell's exhaustive research pierces the opaque operation of clemency. He delivers on his commitment to grasping the legal, political, and societal setting of clemency in order to understand it. The author has a special knack for zooming in and out when relating historical detail and the book is superbly written ... of great value to every researcher of clemency, no matter what their discipline or location
Notă biografică
Ian O'Donnell MRIA is Professor of Criminology at University College Dublin and an Adjunct Fellow of Linacre College, Oxford. His last book, also published as part of OUP's Clarendon Studies in Criminology, was Prisoners, Solitude, and Time.