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Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Autore Anthony Thalia
Pubbl/distr/stampa Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xxiv, 248 pages)
Disciplina 342.0872
Collana GlassHouse book
Soggetto topico Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Australia
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Canada
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - New Zealand
Sentences (Criminal procedure)
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-415-83159-8
0-203-64029-2
1-134-62048-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover ; Half Title; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Table of Contents ; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgements; Table of legislation; Table of cases and inquests; 1. Introduction to Indigenous representations in criminal sentencing; Recognition of the 'Other'; Recognition in a society of denial; Recognition as metaphoric control; Same difference in sentencing: common law and statutory frameworks for recognition; Interplay between discretion to recognize and sentencing statutes; The guises of recognition; Recognition of disparate Indigenous experiences; Shifting penality
Lenience and the tolerant guiseStronger penalties and the exclusionary guise; Vignettes and rationales of analysis; Chapter vignettes; Rationale and limitations of methodology; Conclusion: recognition and the reinvention of the terms of indigeneity; 2. Historicizing colonial and postcolonial Indigenous crime and punishment; Introduction; Constructing the Indigenous criminal on the frontier; Imposing British jurisdiction: land, sovereignty and crime; Legislated exceptionalism: punishment on the body; From body to soul: 'protective' containment
Normalization of Indigenous punishment in the age of assimilationThe spatial field of postcolonial crime; Concluding remarks: state criminalization and the legacy of non-recognition of Indigenous laws; 3. Decolonizing Indigenous crime statistics; Introduction: sentencing, statistics and social relations; Incidence of over-representation; Explaining over-representation and the significance of sentencing; For tougher, for lighter, until statistics do us part; Findings of discrimination in sentencing; Findings of fairness; Implications of sameness in sentencing: difference in criminality
Postcolonial perspectives on overrepresentation: contextualizing and critiquing positivismTranscending positivism: towards a postcolonial sentencing paradigm; The punitive turn in sentencing Indigenous offenders; General features of the punitive turn; From social creatures to individual actors - responsibilization and risk; Protecting the community through deterrent messages; Ideal victims and serious harms; Implications and limitations of the punitive turn framework for sentencing Indigenous offenders; Conclusion: more than mitigation or aggravation
4. Sentencing away culture and customary marriageIntroduction: culture, custom and culpability; Continuing, transforming and resisting cultures; Culture in the courts; Culture, violence and metaphors of state paternalism; Parliament's privileging of punitiveness above culture; Historical appropriations: cultural exclusion to cultural celebration; Early years of the Northern Territory Supreme Court: disciplining the body; Justice Kriewaldt's adoption of cultural leniency: disciplining the soul; Sentencing from the 1970s: cultural valorization
The judicial will to civilize: sentencing contemporary cultural crimes
Record Nr. UNINA-9910452795203321
Anthony Thalia  
Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Autore Anthony Thalia
Pubbl/distr/stampa Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xxiv, 248 pages)
Disciplina 342.0872
Collana GlassHouse book
Soggetto topico Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Australia
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Canada
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - New Zealand
Sentences (Criminal procedure)
ISBN 1-134-62055-1
0-415-83159-8
0-203-64029-2
1-134-62048-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover ; Half Title; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Table of Contents ; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgements; Table of legislation; Table of cases and inquests; 1. Introduction to Indigenous representations in criminal sentencing; Recognition of the 'Other'; Recognition in a society of denial; Recognition as metaphoric control; Same difference in sentencing: common law and statutory frameworks for recognition; Interplay between discretion to recognize and sentencing statutes; The guises of recognition; Recognition of disparate Indigenous experiences; Shifting penality
Lenience and the tolerant guiseStronger penalties and the exclusionary guise; Vignettes and rationales of analysis; Chapter vignettes; Rationale and limitations of methodology; Conclusion: recognition and the reinvention of the terms of indigeneity; 2. Historicizing colonial and postcolonial Indigenous crime and punishment; Introduction; Constructing the Indigenous criminal on the frontier; Imposing British jurisdiction: land, sovereignty and crime; Legislated exceptionalism: punishment on the body; From body to soul: 'protective' containment
Normalization of Indigenous punishment in the age of assimilationThe spatial field of postcolonial crime; Concluding remarks: state criminalization and the legacy of non-recognition of Indigenous laws; 3. Decolonizing Indigenous crime statistics; Introduction: sentencing, statistics and social relations; Incidence of over-representation; Explaining over-representation and the significance of sentencing; For tougher, for lighter, until statistics do us part; Findings of discrimination in sentencing; Findings of fairness; Implications of sameness in sentencing: difference in criminality
Postcolonial perspectives on overrepresentation: contextualizing and critiquing positivismTranscending positivism: towards a postcolonial sentencing paradigm; The punitive turn in sentencing Indigenous offenders; General features of the punitive turn; From social creatures to individual actors - responsibilization and risk; Protecting the community through deterrent messages; Ideal victims and serious harms; Implications and limitations of the punitive turn framework for sentencing Indigenous offenders; Conclusion: more than mitigation or aggravation
4. Sentencing away culture and customary marriageIntroduction: culture, custom and culpability; Continuing, transforming and resisting cultures; Culture in the courts; Culture, violence and metaphors of state paternalism; Parliament's privileging of punitiveness above culture; Historical appropriations: cultural exclusion to cultural celebration; Early years of the Northern Territory Supreme Court: disciplining the body; Justice Kriewaldt's adoption of cultural leniency: disciplining the soul; Sentencing from the 1970s: cultural valorization
The judicial will to civilize: sentencing contemporary cultural crimes
Record Nr. UNINA-9910779994403321
Anthony Thalia  
Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Autore Anthony Thalia
Pubbl/distr/stampa Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xxiv, 248 pages)
Disciplina 342.0872
Collana GlassHouse book
Soggetto topico Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Australia
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Canada
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - New Zealand
Sentences (Criminal procedure)
ISBN 1-134-62055-1
0-415-83159-8
0-203-64029-2
1-134-62048-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover ; Half Title; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Table of Contents ; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgements; Table of legislation; Table of cases and inquests; 1. Introduction to Indigenous representations in criminal sentencing; Recognition of the 'Other'; Recognition in a society of denial; Recognition as metaphoric control; Same difference in sentencing: common law and statutory frameworks for recognition; Interplay between discretion to recognize and sentencing statutes; The guises of recognition; Recognition of disparate Indigenous experiences; Shifting penality
Lenience and the tolerant guiseStronger penalties and the exclusionary guise; Vignettes and rationales of analysis; Chapter vignettes; Rationale and limitations of methodology; Conclusion: recognition and the reinvention of the terms of indigeneity; 2. Historicizing colonial and postcolonial Indigenous crime and punishment; Introduction; Constructing the Indigenous criminal on the frontier; Imposing British jurisdiction: land, sovereignty and crime; Legislated exceptionalism: punishment on the body; From body to soul: 'protective' containment
Normalization of Indigenous punishment in the age of assimilationThe spatial field of postcolonial crime; Concluding remarks: state criminalization and the legacy of non-recognition of Indigenous laws; 3. Decolonizing Indigenous crime statistics; Introduction: sentencing, statistics and social relations; Incidence of over-representation; Explaining over-representation and the significance of sentencing; For tougher, for lighter, until statistics do us part; Findings of discrimination in sentencing; Findings of fairness; Implications of sameness in sentencing: difference in criminality
Postcolonial perspectives on overrepresentation: contextualizing and critiquing positivismTranscending positivism: towards a postcolonial sentencing paradigm; The punitive turn in sentencing Indigenous offenders; General features of the punitive turn; From social creatures to individual actors - responsibilization and risk; Protecting the community through deterrent messages; Ideal victims and serious harms; Implications and limitations of the punitive turn framework for sentencing Indigenous offenders; Conclusion: more than mitigation or aggravation
4. Sentencing away culture and customary marriageIntroduction: culture, custom and culpability; Continuing, transforming and resisting cultures; Culture in the courts; Culture, violence and metaphors of state paternalism; Parliament's privileging of punitiveness above culture; Historical appropriations: cultural exclusion to cultural celebration; Early years of the Northern Territory Supreme Court: disciplining the body; Justice Kriewaldt's adoption of cultural leniency: disciplining the soul; Sentencing from the 1970s: cultural valorization
The judicial will to civilize: sentencing contemporary cultural crimes
Record Nr. UNINA-9910800085703321
Anthony Thalia  
Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Indigenous people, crime and punishment / / Thalia Anthony
Autore Anthony Thalia
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xxiv, 248 pages)
Disciplina 342.0872
Collana GlassHouse book
Soggetto topico Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Australia
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - Canada
Indigenous peoples - Legal status, laws, etc - New Zealand
Sentences (Criminal procedure)
Social behaviour - Social deviance - Punishment - Sentencing
ISBN 1-134-62055-1
0-415-83159-8
0-203-64029-2
1-134-62048-9
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover ; Half Title; Title Page ; Copyright Page ; Table of Contents ; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgements; Table of legislation; Table of cases and inquests; 1. Introduction to Indigenous representations in criminal sentencing; Recognition of the 'Other'; Recognition in a society of denial; Recognition as metaphoric control; Same difference in sentencing: common law and statutory frameworks for recognition; Interplay between discretion to recognize and sentencing statutes; The guises of recognition; Recognition of disparate Indigenous experiences; Shifting penality
Lenience and the tolerant guiseStronger penalties and the exclusionary guise; Vignettes and rationales of analysis; Chapter vignettes; Rationale and limitations of methodology; Conclusion: recognition and the reinvention of the terms of indigeneity; 2. Historicizing colonial and postcolonial Indigenous crime and punishment; Introduction; Constructing the Indigenous criminal on the frontier; Imposing British jurisdiction: land, sovereignty and crime; Legislated exceptionalism: punishment on the body; From body to soul: 'protective' containment
Normalization of Indigenous punishment in the age of assimilationThe spatial field of postcolonial crime; Concluding remarks: state criminalization and the legacy of non-recognition of Indigenous laws; 3. Decolonizing Indigenous crime statistics; Introduction: sentencing, statistics and social relations; Incidence of over-representation; Explaining over-representation and the significance of sentencing; For tougher, for lighter, until statistics do us part; Findings of discrimination in sentencing; Findings of fairness; Implications of sameness in sentencing: difference in criminality
Postcolonial perspectives on overrepresentation: contextualizing and critiquing positivismTranscending positivism: towards a postcolonial sentencing paradigm; The punitive turn in sentencing Indigenous offenders; General features of the punitive turn; From social creatures to individual actors - responsibilization and risk; Protecting the community through deterrent messages; Ideal victims and serious harms; Implications and limitations of the punitive turn framework for sentencing Indigenous offenders; Conclusion: more than mitigation or aggravation
4. Sentencing away culture and customary marriageIntroduction: culture, custom and culpability; Continuing, transforming and resisting cultures; Culture in the courts; Culture, violence and metaphors of state paternalism; Parliament's privileging of punitiveness above culture; Historical appropriations: cultural exclusion to cultural celebration; Early years of the Northern Territory Supreme Court: disciplining the body; Justice Kriewaldt's adoption of cultural leniency: disciplining the soul; Sentencing from the 1970s: cultural valorization
The judicial will to civilize: sentencing contemporary cultural crimes
Record Nr. UNINA-9910825387903321
Anthony Thalia  
Abingdon, Oxon ; ; New York : , : Routledge, , 2013
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui