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CRIMINAL COURTS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   118921


Madness and the making of a colonial order in Burma / Saha, Jonathan   Journal Article
Saha, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In general, during the nineteenth century the British were indifferent to the condition of the insane in colonial Burma. This was most apparent in the Rangoon lunatic asylum, which was a neglected institution reformed reluctantly and episodically following internal crises of discipline and the occasional public scandal. However, whilst psychiatry was generally neglected, British officials did intervene when and where insanity threatened the colonial order. This occurred in the criminal courts where the presence of suspected lunatics was disruptive to the administration of justice. Insanity was also a problem for the colonial regime within the European community, where erratic behaviour was viewed as a threat to racial prestige. This paper shows how, despite its neglected status in Burma, psychiatric knowledge contributed to British understandings of Burman masculinity and to the maintenance of colonial norms of European behaviour.
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2
ID:   132752


Uncommon law: America's excessive criminal law & our common-law origins / Simon, Jonathan   Journal Article
Simon, Jonathan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This essay explores the role that U.S. criminal courts play in shaping the uniquely punitive social order of the United States. U.S. courts have long been defined against the common law of England, from which they emerged. In this essay, I consider the English legacy and suggest that while the United States does draw heavily from common-law traditions, it has also innovated to alter them, a process that has established a criminal justice system even more punitive than that of England.
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