01767 2200217 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001500122084002100137100001600158245007800174250000600252260004800258300002900306520113200335650003601467650004601503INLIS00000000000121720200508201356200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| a9780521606011 0010-0520001217 aeng0 a345.001 21 a345.001 21/NOR/C0 aAlan Norrie00aCrime, Reason and History : A Critical Introduction to Criminal Law 07333 a1 aCambridgebCambridge University Pressc2006 axxv, 274p;23 cm.c23 cm. aCrime, Reason and History provides an alternative approach to the study of the general principles of criminal law. It emphasises, in contrast to orthodox texts, the tensions and contradictions at the law's heart. The author outlines the themes of responsibility, rationality and justice which govern the orthodox criminal law text. He traces these to the early nineteenth century reform of the criminal law and notes conflicts within reform ideologies relating to the idea of the 'responsible individual'. He then takes the reader through the bulk of the criminal law's 'general part' showing how conflicts from reform ideology emerge within criminal law. An historical and political logic underlies its illogicalities, giving it its 'shape'. The author presents a sceptical critique of the liberal positivist tradition in criminal law scholarship, and a social analysis of both its practical necessity and intellectual impossibility. He shows how the ideology of individual legal justice was imposed as a means of excluding alternative political voices, while recognising its importance for the survival of the liberal polity. 0a1. Criminal Law - Great Britain 0a2. Criminal law - Great Britain - History