An exploration of how petty theft in the nineteenth-century German countryside contributed to the modern-day legal system and property laws.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Rebekka Habermas is Professor and the Chair of Modern History at the Georg-August-University, Goettingen. She is also an editor of Historische Anthropologie journal and co-editor of the Historische Studien series.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Abbreviations of the laws Introduction Part I. What Is Theft? Thieves and Jurists - Questions of Honor and Property: 1. Who are the thieves and who are the victims? 2. How does a person end up in court - why does something go on the record? 3. The theft happens - from act to crime Part II. How Law Is Made: Evidence Production: 4. Techniques for finding truth - the slow production of the state of law 5. Techniques for finding truth and other kinds of knowledge formation: how can a new outlook be put into practice? 6. Techniques for finding truth: how do people become jurists, and how does property come into being? Part III. In the Courtroom, or What Is Law?: 7. Reforms for more legal equality, justice, and public openness? 8. The meaninglessness of jury courts for justice 9. Legitimation through procedure 10. Irritations, dissonances, and various other matters: more than just theater Conclusion Bibliography.
Acknowledgements Abbreviations of the laws Introduction Part I. What Is Theft? Thieves and Jurists - Questions of Honor and Property: 1. Who are the thieves and who are the victims? 2. How does a person end up in court - why does something go on the record? 3. The theft happens - from act to crime Part II. How Law Is Made: Evidence Production: 4. Techniques for finding truth - the slow production of the state of law 5. Techniques for finding truth and other kinds of knowledge formation: how can a new outlook be put into practice? 6. Techniques for finding truth: how do people become jurists, and how does property come into being? Part III. In the Courtroom, or What Is Law?: 7. Reforms for more legal equality, justice, and public openness? 8. The meaninglessness of jury courts for justice 9. Legitimation through procedure 10. Irritations, dissonances, and various other matters: more than just theater Conclusion Bibliography.
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