E-Book, Englisch, 768 Seiten, eBook
Kury / Redo Crime Prevention and Justice in 2030
1. Auflage 2021
ISBN: 978-3-030-56227-4
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
The UN and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
E-Book, Englisch, 768 Seiten, eBook
ISBN: 978-3-030-56227-4
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Prologue by Helmut Kury and Slawomir Redo.- Part I – Rule of Law and Realities of Life in the Context of the 2030 Justice and Crime Prevention: Democracy – Human Rights – Rule of Law: European Developments and the Importance of an Independent Judiciary by Friedrich Forsthuber.- Youth Perception on Hate Crimes, Hate Speeches and Nationalism in Contemporary India by J. Maria Agnes Sasitha.- Incorporating the United Nations Norms into Iranian Post-Revolution Criminal Policy: A Criminological-Victimological Approach by Mehrdad Rayejian Asli.- Part II – Leaving No One Behind: Intergenerational Vulnerability and Educating for Justice: Perspectives on Elderly Crime and Victimization in the Future by Peter C. Kratcoski and Maximilian Edelbacher.- Universal Basic Income (UBI) for Reducing Inequalities and Increasing Socio-Economic Inclusion: A Proposal for a New Sustained Policy Perspective by Inez Wijngaarde, Jebamalai Vinanchiarachi, and Jeff Readman.- Prisoners and their Families – The Effects of Imprisonment on the Family by Helmut Kury.- Dealing with Mental Illness and Violence in the (Youth-)Prison by Helmut Kury and Romy Heße.- On Nelson Mandela Rule 63, Prisoner’s Moral Vulnerability and Development in the context of the 2030 United Nations Sustainable World by Slawomir Redo and Krzysztof Sawicki.- Parents who hit. Troubled Families and Children’s Happiness: Do Gender and National Context make a Difference? by Ineke Haen Marshall, Candence Wills and Chris E. Marshall.- The UN Global Study on Children Deprived of Liberty – The Role of Academia in “Making the Invisible and Forgotten Visible” by Manfred Nowak and Manu Krishan.- Part III – Living in Harmony with Nature: Mother Earth’s Criminology: United Nations Initiatives in Preventing Environmental Crime by Rob White.- Assessing the Viability of Environmental Projects for a Crime Prevention-InspiredCulture of Lawfulness by Wieslaw Plywaczewski, Joanna Narodowska and Maciej Duda.- Actualising the Right to Adequate Standard of Living: A Critical Examination of Green Criminology from an Indian Perspective by Murugesan Srinivasan and Alagesan Shankar Prakash.- Notes on the Case of Orangutan Sandra, the non-human Subject of Rights by Pedro R. David.- Part IV – Ethics and Science in the Service of Countering Crime: Surveillance and the Impossible Search for Ideal Behaviour by Toine Spapens.- Ethics and the Development of Artificial Intelligence – Challenges and Dilemmas in the Context of the 2030 United Nations Agenda for Sustainable Development by Aneta Breczko, Wojciech Filipkowski and Izabela Krasnicka.- From Wonders as Crime to Forensics in Service of the 2030 United Nations Agenda by Emil W. Plywaczewski, Ewa M. Guzik-Makaruk, Wojciech Filipkowski and Emilia Jurgielewicz-Delegacz.- The Rule of Law, Peacebuilding, and Agenda 2030: Lessons from the Western Balkans by Alistair D. Edgar.- Part V – Research & the Promotion of Peaceful and Inclusive Societies: Crime, Victimization, and Intentions to Migrate in the Northern Triangle by Christopher S. Inkpen, Wayne J. Pitts and Pamela Lattimore.- Criminal Violence and its Prevention in Context. Specific Challenges for the In-tegration of Refugees and Migrants in the 21st Century by Anastasia Chalkia.- Legal Education for Profit and the United Nations Call for “Quality Education” and “Strong Institutions” in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda by Riaz Tejani.- Money Laundering: China and its Evolving Criminal Policy Response by Ling Zhou and Hanming Xu.- The Policy Relevance of Comparative Criminology: On Evidence-Based Policies, Policy Learning and the Scales of the Discipline by Susanne Karstedt.- Part VI – Countering Art Crime & Violence: United Nations Perspective on Preventing Transnational Organised Crime against Cultural Property in the Era of Sustainable Development and Restitution Arguments by Kamil Zeidler and Julia Stepnowska.- Reducing Violent Crime by 50% before 2030: Decisive Action Now to Achieve these SDGs by Irwin Waller.- Part VII – Philosophies of Law & New Legal Realities in the Context of the 2030 Justice and Crime: The Erosion of Justice Symbolism by Yvon Dandurand and Jessica Jahn.- The Relevance of Philosophical and Religious Ideas to the United Nations Quest for Universalizing Criminal Justice by Slawomir Redo.- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Public International Law and the Confucian Legal Culture for 2030 and Beyond by Ying-Jun Zhang.- Is Socrates Mortal? On the Impact of Socratic Logic on Teaching and Learning the United Nations Crime Prevention Law by Slawomir Redo.- Reflections on the ‘Right to Justice’ – Now and in the Future by Karol Rutkowski.- Part VIII – Faith and Crime Prevention: TheFaith-based Organizations and the United Nations by Michael Platzer.- Turning the Tables on the War on Terror: The Alliance of Civilization as a United Nations Response to it by Tina L. Bertrand.- Spirituality, Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice: The Ongoing Significance of Faith-Based Organizations to the Work of the United Nations by Thomas Walsh.- Epilogue by Slawomir Redo and Helmut Kury.