Comparative Criminal Justice Systems encourages critical thinking by introducing students and policy makers to different ways of organizing the administration of justice in the different parts of the world without ethnocentric assumptions that ‘our’ ways must be superior to all others. Comparative Justice: Off the Beaten Path offers a simple definition of comparative justice: the study of the similarities and dissimilarities of diverse systems of social order. It introduces readers to interesting case studies of the families of law and offers engaging contributions in comparative justice as well as fresh perspectives on developing countries. [Amazon.com]https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/sociology_criminaljustice_books/1036/thumbnail.jp
Among developed nations, the United States has one of the most extreme and harsh criminal justice sy...
Comparative law holds the promise of improving knowledge. Looking at other legal systems enables a n...
Legal systems across the globe have attempted to accommodate to our new understandings of human beha...
Discusses comparative criminal justice drawing on numerous illustrations with reference to the reaso...
Appraises a leading effort to explain differences in prison rates round the world as linked in terms...
How can the study of comparative criminal justice avoid the opposite dangers of ethnocentrism and re...
How can the study of comparative criminal justice avoid the opposite dangers of ethnocentrism and re...
About the book Criminal Justice: Local and Global and its sister text Crime: Local and Global are t...
Review: 'Comparative Criminal Justice and Globalization imaginatively juxtaposes work by leading con...
The concept of justice is about the consideration of parallel issues, concerns, needs,deserts and en...
Comparative Youth Justice is the first book to critically reflect on contemporary juvenile justice r...
Over the past two decades, international criminal law has been increasingly institutionalized and ha...
Words, language, culture, and literature are so important to us human beings that it should come as ...
This three-volume set of original (classic and contemporary) readings is designed to reveal the broa...
Introduction to Criminal Justice: A Balanced Approach provides students with engaging, comprehensive...
Among developed nations, the United States has one of the most extreme and harsh criminal justice sy...
Comparative law holds the promise of improving knowledge. Looking at other legal systems enables a n...
Legal systems across the globe have attempted to accommodate to our new understandings of human beha...
Discusses comparative criminal justice drawing on numerous illustrations with reference to the reaso...
Appraises a leading effort to explain differences in prison rates round the world as linked in terms...
How can the study of comparative criminal justice avoid the opposite dangers of ethnocentrism and re...
How can the study of comparative criminal justice avoid the opposite dangers of ethnocentrism and re...
About the book Criminal Justice: Local and Global and its sister text Crime: Local and Global are t...
Review: 'Comparative Criminal Justice and Globalization imaginatively juxtaposes work by leading con...
The concept of justice is about the consideration of parallel issues, concerns, needs,deserts and en...
Comparative Youth Justice is the first book to critically reflect on contemporary juvenile justice r...
Over the past two decades, international criminal law has been increasingly institutionalized and ha...
Words, language, culture, and literature are so important to us human beings that it should come as ...
This three-volume set of original (classic and contemporary) readings is designed to reveal the broa...
Introduction to Criminal Justice: A Balanced Approach provides students with engaging, comprehensive...
Among developed nations, the United States has one of the most extreme and harsh criminal justice sy...
Comparative law holds the promise of improving knowledge. Looking at other legal systems enables a n...
Legal systems across the globe have attempted to accommodate to our new understandings of human beha...