Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Access to material resources (1)
- And Regions; Legal History (1)
- Archaeology; Social Studies; Criminal Law and Procedure; Domestic Violence; Marriage and Couples; Gender and the Law; Jurisprudence; Violence; Crimes Against the Person (1)
- Areas (1)
- Community (1)
-
- Comparative and Foreign Law (1)
- Constitutional Law (1)
- Courts (1)
- Criminal Law and Procedure (1)
- Criminal justice system (1)
- Defendants; Legal Practice and Procedure; Due Process; Constitutional Law (1)
- Divorce (1)
- Domestic violence (1)
- Due Process (1)
- Fourteenth Amendment (1)
- Generally (1)
- Generally; Fourteenth Amendment; Preventive Detention; Criminal Law and Procedure; Israel; Countries (1)
- Intervention strategy (1)
- Legal Practice and Procedure (1)
- Marriage and Couples (1)
- Private violence (1)
- Public trial (1)
- Reform movements (1)
- Sentencing and Punishment; Penology; Criminal Law and Procedure (1)
- Sexual assault (1)
- Water Law (1)
- Women of color (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Criminal Procedure
Where Hannah Arendt Went Wrong, David Abraham
Is Relevant Conduct Relevant - Reconsidering The Guidelines Approach To Real Offense Sentencing, David Yellen
Is Relevant Conduct Relevant - Reconsidering The Guidelines Approach To Real Offense Sentencing, David Yellen
Articles
No abstract provided.
Litigation In The United States And Mexico: A Comparative Overview, Robert M. Kossick, Jr.
Litigation In The United States And Mexico: A Comparative Overview, Robert M. Kossick, Jr.
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
Prosecuting Violence/Reconstructing Community, Anthony V. Alfieri
Prosecuting Violence/Reconstructing Community, Anthony V. Alfieri
Articles
For two centuries, the private violence of American history has paraded into courts for public trial. Often dramatized by the spectacle of rape and murder, the public trials of private violence increasingly are seen to decide the fates of both the accused and the victim of crime. The fate of community, whether the community of the victim, the accused, or the public, seems at first blush untouched by such trials. Like victims and their families, however, communities struck by violence suffer profound loss. That loss is expressed in the destruction of public discourse, reason, and citizenship. This public ruin is …
Afterword And Response: What Digging Does And Does Not Do, Patricia D. White
Afterword And Response: What Digging Does And Does Not Do, Patricia D. White
Articles
No abstract provided.
Shifting Power For Battered Women: Law, Material Resources, And Poor Women Of Color, Donna Coker
Shifting Power For Battered Women: Law, Material Resources, And Poor Women Of Color, Donna Coker
Articles
No abstract provided.