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Penal Populism and Children of Imprisoned Parents

2014
Since prisoners’ families — perhaps especially prisoners’ children — can be severely affected by the use of imprisonment, and since this area has suffered from a remarkable lack of awareness historically, it is obvious to ask whether and to what degree there is currently political focus on prisoners’ children.
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4. Penal populism and epistemic crime control

2017
Questions of crime and security today often seem dominated by a contest between populism on the one hand and epistemic crime control on the other. These positions appear to press conflicting claims: the former seeks to speak for ‘the people’, or ‘victims’, or ‘law-abiding citizens’ who have been ill-served by remote penal elites; the latter (e.g., the ...
Ian Loader, Richard Sparks
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Penal Populism in Criminal Cases in Courts

ZANKO Journal of Law and Politics
Penal populism is an approach in which the criminal justice system policy makers and practitioners formulate and implement dramatic and popular criminal policies to draw public opinion regardless of scientific findings. Populism may penetrate substantive criminal rules, and in this regard, severe penalties might be approved by lawmakers. Penal populism
Halala Rahman, Mahdi Mahdi, Hind Hameed
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Penal Populism: The End of Reason

2022
John Pratt, Michelle Miao
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Engaging with penal populism

Punishment & Society, 2007
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Populism and the economics of globalization

Journal of International Business Policy, 2018
Dani Rodrik
exaly  

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