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Crime Justice and Discretion in England 1740-1820 by Peter King, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Peter King

Current price: $115.50
Crime Justice and Discretion in England 1740-1820 by Peter King, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Crime Justice and Discretion in England 1740-1820 by Peter King, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

Coles

Crime Justice and Discretion in England 1740-1820 by Peter King, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Peter King

Current price: $115.50
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Size: 2.2 x 23.4 x 600

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The criminal law has often been seen as central to the rule of the eighteenth-century landed elite in England. This book presents a detailed analysis of the judicial processs - of victims' reactions, pretrial practices, policing, magistrates hearings, trials, sentencing, pardoning andpunishment - using property offenders as its main focus. The period 1740-1820 - the final era before the coming of the new police and the repeal of the capital code - emerges as the great age of discretionary justice, and the book explores the impact of the vast discretionary powers held by manysocial groups. It reassesses both the relationship between crime rates and the economic deprivation, and the many ways that vulnerability to prosecution varied widely across the lifecycle, in the light of the highly selective nature of pretrial negotiations. More centrally, by asking at every stage - who used the law, for what purposes, in whose interests and with what social effects - it opens up a number of new perspectives on the role of the law in eighteenth-century social relations. The law emerges as less the instrument of particular elite groupsand more as an arena of struggle, of negotiation, and of compromise. Its rituals were less controllable and its merciful moments less manageable and less exclusively available to the gentry elite than has been previously suggested. Justice was vulnerable to power, but was also mobilised toconstrain it. Despite the key functions that the propertied fulfilled, courtroom crowds, the counter-theatre of the condemned, and the decisions of the victims from a very wide range of backgrounds had a role to play, and the criteria on which decisions were based were shaped as much by the broadand more humane discourse which Fielding called the 'good mind' as by the instrumental needs of the propertied elites. | Crime Justice and Discretion in England 1740-1820 by Peter King, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
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