Crime and human rights [electronic resource] / edited by Stephan Parmentier and Elmar G.M. Weitekamp.
Material type: TextSeries: Sociology of crime, law, and deviance ; v. 9.Publication details: Amsterdam ; Boston : Elsevier/JAI, 2007Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (viii, 275 p.) : illISBN: 9780857240569 (electronic bk.) :; 0857240560 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Crime -- Sociological aspects | Human rights | Criminals -- Civil rights | Criminal justice, Administration of | Crime & criminology | Social Science -- Criminology | Political Science -- Political Freedom & Security -- Human RightsAdditional physical formats: Print version:: Crime and human rights.DDC classification: 364 22 LOC classification: HV6028 | .C75 2007Online resources: Click here to access online Summary: Over the past decades, human rights have gained an increasing significance in law, politics and society, at the national and the international level. According to the American scholar Louis Henkin, human rights have become the paradigm of our time, thereby displacing previous paradigms such as religion and socialism. The criminal justice system has not been immune to this rapid rise of human rights. In the past two decades, considerable attention has been paid to the rules of due process for suspects and offenders, during criminal proceedings and in situations of detention.In recent years, the rights of victims have gained more weight in the criminal justice system, also in international tribunals and courts. Moreover, the principles and norms of human rights have received wide attention in conceptualizing crime and delinquency. Some crimes, e.g. trafficking in human beings or violence against women and children, are now defined in terms of human rights violations. The same is true with gross and systematic human rights violations, such as genocide and crimes against humanity.This volume wishes to address these major developments in a systematic way, from the perspective of criminology and sociology, by way of original contributions. In the first part, we look at several types of crimes, old and new, from the angle of human rights and human rights violations, while the second part sketches the influence of the human rights paradigm on some parts of the justice system in North America, Europe and elsewhere. This volume is addressed to students and researchers in criminology and criminal justice studies, and to professionals and policy-makers in the criminal justice system, primarily but not exclusively in North America and Europe.Item type | Current library | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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HV6023.K38 J33 2020 Jack Katz : | HV6025 .E44 2019 The Emerald handbook of narrative criminology / | HV6025 .E64 2020 The Emerald handbook of feminism, criminology and social change / | HV6028 .C75 2007 Crime and human rights | HV6030 .E26 2011 Economic crisis and crime | HV6030 .E43 1994 Economics of crime | HV6030 .L46 2017 Environmental criminology : |
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Over the past decades, human rights have gained an increasing significance in law, politics and society, at the national and the international level. According to the American scholar Louis Henkin, human rights have become the paradigm of our time, thereby displacing previous paradigms such as religion and socialism. The criminal justice system has not been immune to this rapid rise of human rights. In the past two decades, considerable attention has been paid to the rules of due process for suspects and offenders, during criminal proceedings and in situations of detention.In recent years, the rights of victims have gained more weight in the criminal justice system, also in international tribunals and courts. Moreover, the principles and norms of human rights have received wide attention in conceptualizing crime and delinquency. Some crimes, e.g. trafficking in human beings or violence against women and children, are now defined in terms of human rights violations. The same is true with gross and systematic human rights violations, such as genocide and crimes against humanity.This volume wishes to address these major developments in a systematic way, from the perspective of criminology and sociology, by way of original contributions. In the first part, we look at several types of crimes, old and new, from the angle of human rights and human rights violations, while the second part sketches the influence of the human rights paradigm on some parts of the justice system in North America, Europe and elsewhere. This volume is addressed to students and researchers in criminology and criminal justice studies, and to professionals and policy-makers in the criminal justice system, primarily but not exclusively in North America and Europe.
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