Life imprisonment and penalties in general have been overlooked in international human rights law. Yet, with the gradual disappearance of the death penalty, life imprisonment is likely to become the next prominent issue. Taking the 2010 Graham v Florida US Supreme Court case as a starting point, this paper depicts life imprisonment as a human rights concern, explores the developing international standards on the issue and challenges its relative neglect by international human rights bodies
This thesis is a comparative jurisprudential study of life imprisonment in England and Wales (E&W) a...
Following slavery, capital punishment is slowly finding its way toward abolition. This trend is mani...
Taking the life sentence as the new \u27ultimate penalty\u27 for many countries, this paper explores...
Life imprisonment and penalties in general have been overlooked in international human rights law. Y...
Unsurprisingly, life imprisonment is a maximum penalty under international criminal law, where the p...
Life imprisonment has replaced capital punishment as the most common sentence imposed for heinous cr...
Life Imprisonment, unlike the death penalty, does not attract the attention of the doctrine. There a...
The article analyzed the UN Congresses of Crime Prevention, in which the main problematic issues con...
Life imprisonment without prospect of release is a penalty experiencing remarkable success today, es...
Recent landmark judicial decisions by diverse national and international tribunals have shifted the ...
Corporal punishments by and large and death penalty specifically raise serious problems as to respec...
The attitude of international law and practice to supreme penalties has evolved enormously over the ...
In this paper, the authors examine the relevance of international law and human rights for capital p...
The objective of this article is to call attention to the delicate but often disregarded issue of li...
Life Imprisonment, unlike the death penalty, does not attract the attention of the doctrine. There a...
This thesis is a comparative jurisprudential study of life imprisonment in England and Wales (E&W) a...
Following slavery, capital punishment is slowly finding its way toward abolition. This trend is mani...
Taking the life sentence as the new \u27ultimate penalty\u27 for many countries, this paper explores...
Life imprisonment and penalties in general have been overlooked in international human rights law. Y...
Unsurprisingly, life imprisonment is a maximum penalty under international criminal law, where the p...
Life imprisonment has replaced capital punishment as the most common sentence imposed for heinous cr...
Life Imprisonment, unlike the death penalty, does not attract the attention of the doctrine. There a...
The article analyzed the UN Congresses of Crime Prevention, in which the main problematic issues con...
Life imprisonment without prospect of release is a penalty experiencing remarkable success today, es...
Recent landmark judicial decisions by diverse national and international tribunals have shifted the ...
Corporal punishments by and large and death penalty specifically raise serious problems as to respec...
The attitude of international law and practice to supreme penalties has evolved enormously over the ...
In this paper, the authors examine the relevance of international law and human rights for capital p...
The objective of this article is to call attention to the delicate but often disregarded issue of li...
Life Imprisonment, unlike the death penalty, does not attract the attention of the doctrine. There a...
This thesis is a comparative jurisprudential study of life imprisonment in England and Wales (E&W) a...
Following slavery, capital punishment is slowly finding its way toward abolition. This trend is mani...
Taking the life sentence as the new \u27ultimate penalty\u27 for many countries, this paper explores...