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Author Dingwall, Gavin, author.

Title Blamestorming, blamemongers and scapegoats : allocating blame in the criminal justice process / Gavin Dingwall and Tim Hillier.

Publication Info. Bristol, UK : Policy Press, 2015.

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Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe JSTOR Open Ebooks  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
data file
Note Online resource; title from PDF title page (Ebsco, viewed February 10, 2015).
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary We live in a society that is increasingly preoccupied with allocating blame: when something goes wrong someone must be to blame. Bringing together philosophical, psychological, and sociological accounts of blame, this is the first detailed socio-legal account of the role of blame in which the authors present a novel study of the legal process of blame attribution, set in the context of criminalisation as a social and political process. The book identifies the problematic and elusive nature of blame and contrasts this with the uncritical way in which it is often used in the criminal justice process.
Contents BLAMESTORMING, BLAMEMONGERS AND SCAPEGOATS; Contents; About the authors ; Preface; 1. Introduction and the centrality of blame; The Case of Mrs Inglis; The Case of Baby P; Blamestorming; Blamemongers; Scapegoats; Blame; Preliminary reflections; 2. Blame in the criminal justice process; Pre-trial diversion: removing those of limited culpability; Pre-trial diversion: fixed penalties for particular categories of offence; Pre-trial diversion: the routine diversion of some types of criminal conduct to specialist state agencies; Mode of trial: deciding which court will hear a case
Justifying sentence: the normative backgroundJustifying sentence: the legal background; Conclusions: blame and procedural decision-making; 3. Blame and the blameless; The minimum age of criminal responsibility; Mental capacity; Justifications, excuses and circumstances precluding wrongfulness; Blame and luck; 4. Blameless crime; Motive: criminalising the well-intentioned; Recklessness: criminalising the risk-taker; Negligence and gross negligence: criminalising the incompetent; Strict liability: criminalising the blameless; Conclusion; 5. Blame amplification ; Offence seriousness
Shocking and extraordinary crimes6. Putting oneself in harm's way; Blame, gang membership and paramilitary involvement; Purchasing drugs, 'associating with criminals' and expanding the 'blameworthy'; Drug misuse and crime; Blame, intoxication and alcohol-related offending; Conclusion: voluntarily heightening the risk of offending; 7. Blame, punitiveness and criminalisation; The growth of blame culture and the need for scapegoats; From civil liability to criminal liability; From human rights to the International Criminal Court; 8. Blamestorming and blamemongers; Defining blame
Legal determinations about blameBlame and procedural decision-making; Blame, luck and diminished responsibility; Precursory conduct and the attribution of blame; Quantifying blame; Swiss cheese; The blamemongers: from process to value; Glossary; References; Case list; Index
Subject Criminal liability.
Blame.
Criminal justice, Administration of.
Blāme.
LAW -- Criminal Law -- General.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Criminology.
Blame
Criminal justice, Administration of
Criminal liability
Indexed Term Social Science
Criminology
Added Author Hillier, Tim, author.
ISBN 9781447305019 (electronic bk.)
1447305019 (electronic bk.)
9781447305002 (hardcover)
1447305000
9781447321163
1447321162
Standard No. AU@ 000056065305
AU@ 000066288488
AU@ 000068809379
CHNEW 000890323
DEBSZ 427582296
DEBSZ 449483223
DEBSZ 454913230
UKMGB 018798414
AU@ 000062127249

 
    
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