Freedom and criminal responsibility in American legal thought /
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Author / Creator: | Green, Thomas Andrew, author. |
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Imprint: | New York : Cambridge University Press, 2014. |
Description: | 1 online resource |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12540181 |
Table of Contents:
- Part I. Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in the Age of Pound
- 1. Prologue : The fin de siècle : Speranza
- 2. The Progressive Era : Pound
- 3. Pound eclipsed? : the conversation of the mid to late 1920s
- Part II. Conventional Morality and the Rule of Law : Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in the Forgotten Years, 1930-1960
- 4. Scientific positivism, utilitarianism, and the wages of conventional morality : 1930-1937
- 5. Entr'acte : intimations of freedom, 1937-1953
- 6. Durham v. United States, the moral context of the criminal law, and reinterpretations of the Progressive inheritance, 1954-1958
- Part III. Freedom, Criminal Responsibility, and Retributivism in Late Twentieth-Century Legal Thought
- 7. The foundations of neo-retributivism, 1957-1976
- 8. Rethinking the freedom question, 1978-1994
- 9. Epilogue : Competing perspectives at the close of the twentieth century.