{"title":"量刑的意义","authors":"G. Marquis, Julian V. Roberts, David P. Cole","doi":"10.3138/9781442676923","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Law, Crime, Punishment and SocietyGreg MarquisEds. Julian V. Roberts and David P. Cole. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. 363 pp.Legal studies in Canada are experiencing a golden age as articles, anthologies and monographs produced by academics trained in the 1980s and 1990s continue to appear. Nine books, nearly 50 authors and more than 2,000 pages of text and notes later, this reviewer is suffering from intellectual fatigue, but the type that comes from a good workout.In terms of Canada's legal history, the Osgoode Society has been the leading force for publication for two decades. As of 1999 it had produced more than three dozen monographs or collections of essays. Its most recent anthology is edited by G. Blaine Baker and Jim Phillips, law professors who are also noted legal historians. Essays in the History of Canadian Law VIII evolved out of a 1998 conference dedicated to pioneering legal scholar R.C.B. Risk. In the 1970s the American-trained Risk published on the relationship between law and the economy in nineteenth-century Ontario. Significantly, these essays did not appear in history publications, but in law journals. His work is largely unknown to most Canadian historians, but Risk has exerted an important influence on legal history scholars associated with law faculties. His stature is acknowledged by two scholars of international repute, Robert Gordon and David Sugarman, and his body of work and its effect are assessed in an insightful chapter by G. Blaine Baker.Most of the contributors to the Risk festschrift are involved with law schools, and the tone of most chapters tends towards classic legal history. Many of the contributions will challenge undergraduate students of history or criminal justice. Exceptions include Constance Backhouse's study of a racially motivated murder of a member of the Onyota'a:ka (Oneida) First Nation in 1902, a case study that underscores the lack of research on race and law in Canadian history. Hamar Foster's examination of Indian title in British Columbia and John McLaren's article on Chinese criminality in British Columbia from 1890 to 1920 also have broader appeal than mainstream legal history. White society \"racialized\" the Chinese not only through stereotypes, but through criminal law and law enforcement, especially in the areas of gambling, prostitution and opium smoking. McLaren indicates that although the Chinese in British Columbia were subjected to legal and bureaucratic racism, police harassment and informal discrimination, as a \"despised minority\" they also appealed to the rule of law and the courts for protection. On a more mundane level they utilized the civil courts for disputed commercial transactions. Because most criminal convictions against the Chinese were summary offences, it was rare for them to surface in appeal courts. Yet according to McLaren, appellate judges in British Columbia were guided by law, not racial prejudice, in many of their rulings involving the Chinese.Peter Oliver's chapter on the judiciary in the historiography of Upper Canada offers a counter-revisionist critique of recent interpretations that condemn the colonial elite's manipulation of the legal system under the constitution of 1791. For much of the twentieth century, conservative and \"consensus\" historians of Upper Canada regarded judges and other members of the legal elite in a positive manner and dismissed radical reformers such as William Lyon Mackenzie as \"demagogues.\" Early nineteenth-century reformers had complained loudly over the administration of justice, particularly when it was abused by Tory magistrates and judges for political ends. In recent years, scholars examining treason, sedition, libel and a number of celebrated murder trials have portrayed the Tory elite as subverting the rule of law. According to Oliver, it was the appointed judges, not popular politicians, who pressed for law reform prior to the 1840s - reforms such as the notable diminution of capital offences in 1833, jail reform and prisoners' rights. …","PeriodicalId":45057,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"1999-01-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"57","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Making Sense of Sentencing\",\"authors\":\"G. Marquis, Julian V. Roberts, David P. Cole\",\"doi\":\"10.3138/9781442676923\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Law, Crime, Punishment and SocietyGreg MarquisEds. Julian V. Roberts and David P. Cole. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. 363 pp.Legal studies in Canada are experiencing a golden age as articles, anthologies and monographs produced by academics trained in the 1980s and 1990s continue to appear. Nine books, nearly 50 authors and more than 2,000 pages of text and notes later, this reviewer is suffering from intellectual fatigue, but the type that comes from a good workout.In terms of Canada's legal history, the Osgoode Society has been the leading force for publication for two decades. As of 1999 it had produced more than three dozen monographs or collections of essays. Its most recent anthology is edited by G. Blaine Baker and Jim Phillips, law professors who are also noted legal historians. Essays in the History of Canadian Law VIII evolved out of a 1998 conference dedicated to pioneering legal scholar R.C.B. Risk. In the 1970s the American-trained Risk published on the relationship between law and the economy in nineteenth-century Ontario. Significantly, these essays did not appear in history publications, but in law journals. His work is largely unknown to most Canadian historians, but Risk has exerted an important influence on legal history scholars associated with law faculties. His stature is acknowledged by two scholars of international repute, Robert Gordon and David Sugarman, and his body of work and its effect are assessed in an insightful chapter by G. Blaine Baker.Most of the contributors to the Risk festschrift are involved with law schools, and the tone of most chapters tends towards classic legal history. Many of the contributions will challenge undergraduate students of history or criminal justice. Exceptions include Constance Backhouse's study of a racially motivated murder of a member of the Onyota'a:ka (Oneida) First Nation in 1902, a case study that underscores the lack of research on race and law in Canadian history. Hamar Foster's examination of Indian title in British Columbia and John McLaren's article on Chinese criminality in British Columbia from 1890 to 1920 also have broader appeal than mainstream legal history. White society \\\"racialized\\\" the Chinese not only through stereotypes, but through criminal law and law enforcement, especially in the areas of gambling, prostitution and opium smoking. McLaren indicates that although the Chinese in British Columbia were subjected to legal and bureaucratic racism, police harassment and informal discrimination, as a \\\"despised minority\\\" they also appealed to the rule of law and the courts for protection. On a more mundane level they utilized the civil courts for disputed commercial transactions. Because most criminal convictions against the Chinese were summary offences, it was rare for them to surface in appeal courts. Yet according to McLaren, appellate judges in British Columbia were guided by law, not racial prejudice, in many of their rulings involving the Chinese.Peter Oliver's chapter on the judiciary in the historiography of Upper Canada offers a counter-revisionist critique of recent interpretations that condemn the colonial elite's manipulation of the legal system under the constitution of 1791. For much of the twentieth century, conservative and \\\"consensus\\\" historians of Upper Canada regarded judges and other members of the legal elite in a positive manner and dismissed radical reformers such as William Lyon Mackenzie as \\\"demagogues.\\\" Early nineteenth-century reformers had complained loudly over the administration of justice, particularly when it was abused by Tory magistrates and judges for political ends. In recent years, scholars examining treason, sedition, libel and a number of celebrated murder trials have portrayed the Tory elite as subverting the rule of law. According to Oliver, it was the appointed judges, not popular politicians, who pressed for law reform prior to the 1840s - reforms such as the notable diminution of capital offences in 1833, jail reform and prisoners' rights. …\",\"PeriodicalId\":45057,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.7000,\"publicationDate\":\"1999-01-31\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"57\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.3138/9781442676923\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"0\",\"JCRName\":\"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF CANADIAN STUDIES-REVUE D ETUDES CANADIENNES","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3138/9781442676923","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 57
摘要
《法律、犯罪、惩罚与社会》格雷格·马奎斯主编。朱利安·v·罗伯茨和大卫·p·科尔。多伦多:多伦多大学出版社,1999。加拿大的法律研究正经历着一个黄金时代,由在20世纪80年代和90年代受过训练的学者撰写的文章、选集和专著不断出现。在阅读了九本书、近50位作者、2000多页的文字和笔记之后,这位书评人正在遭受智力疲劳的折磨,但这种疲劳来自于良好的锻炼。就加拿大的法律史而言,奥斯古德学会20年来一直是出版的主导力量。到1999年为止,它已经出版了三十多部专著或文集。它最近的选集是由G.布莱恩·贝克和吉姆·菲利普斯编辑的,他们是法学教授,也是著名的法律史学家。在加拿大法律VIII的历史论文演变出1998年的会议,致力于开拓法律学者R.C.B.风险。20世纪70年代,在美国受训的Risk发表了关于19世纪安大略省法律与经济关系的文章。值得注意的是,这些文章并没有出现在历史出版物上,而是出现在法律期刊上。他的作品在很大程度上不为大多数加拿大历史学家所知,但Risk对与法学院相关的法律史学者产生了重要影响。他的地位得到了两位国际知名学者罗伯特·戈登和大卫·舒格曼的认可,他的大部分工作及其影响在g·布莱恩·贝克的一章中得到了深刻的评价。《风险》杂志的大部分撰稿人都与法学院有关,大部分章节的基调都倾向于经典的法律史。许多贡献将挑战历史或刑事司法专业的本科生。例外情况包括康斯坦斯·巴克斯豪斯(Constance Backhouse)对1902年奥奈达第一民族(Onyota'a:ka (Oneida) First Nation)一名成员因种族原因被谋杀的研究,这一案例研究突显了加拿大历史上对种族和法律研究的缺乏。哈马尔·福斯特(Hamar Foster)对不列颠哥伦比亚省印第安人所有权的研究,以及约翰·麦克拉伦(John McLaren)关于1890年至1920年不列颠哥伦比亚省华人犯罪的文章,也比主流法律史更具吸引力。白人社会不仅通过刻板印象,而且通过刑法和执法,特别是在赌博、卖淫和吸食鸦片等领域,将中国人“种族化”。麦克拉伦指出,尽管不列颠哥伦比亚省的华人受到法律和官僚主义的种族主义、警察的骚扰和非正式的歧视,但作为“被鄙视的少数民族”,他们也向法治和法院寻求保护。在更世俗的层面上,他们利用民事法庭来处理有争议的商业交易。由于大多数针对中国人的刑事定罪都是即决性犯罪,他们很少在上诉法庭上露面。然而,根据麦克拉伦的说法,不列颠哥伦比亚省的上诉法官在许多涉及华人的裁决中都是以法律为指导,而不是以种族偏见为指导。彼得·奥利弗(Peter Oliver)在上加拿大历史编纂中的司法一章中,对最近的解释提出了一种反修正主义的批评,这些解释谴责殖民精英在1791年宪法下操纵法律体系。在20世纪的大部分时间里,上加拿大的保守派和“共识”历史学家以积极的态度看待法官和其他法律精英成员,并将威廉·里昂·麦肯齐(William Lyon Mackenzie)等激进改革者视为“煽动家”。19世纪早期的改革者曾大声抱怨司法管理,特别是当保守党地方法官和法官为了政治目的滥用司法时。近年来,研究叛国罪、煽动叛乱、诽谤和一些著名谋杀案审判的学者将保守党精英描绘成颠覆法治的人。根据奥利弗的说法,在19世纪40年代之前,是任命的法官,而不是受欢迎的政治家,推动了法律改革——比如1833年显著减少死刑、监狱改革和囚犯权利等改革。…
Law, Crime, Punishment and SocietyGreg MarquisEds. Julian V. Roberts and David P. Cole. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999. 363 pp.Legal studies in Canada are experiencing a golden age as articles, anthologies and monographs produced by academics trained in the 1980s and 1990s continue to appear. Nine books, nearly 50 authors and more than 2,000 pages of text and notes later, this reviewer is suffering from intellectual fatigue, but the type that comes from a good workout.In terms of Canada's legal history, the Osgoode Society has been the leading force for publication for two decades. As of 1999 it had produced more than three dozen monographs or collections of essays. Its most recent anthology is edited by G. Blaine Baker and Jim Phillips, law professors who are also noted legal historians. Essays in the History of Canadian Law VIII evolved out of a 1998 conference dedicated to pioneering legal scholar R.C.B. Risk. In the 1970s the American-trained Risk published on the relationship between law and the economy in nineteenth-century Ontario. Significantly, these essays did not appear in history publications, but in law journals. His work is largely unknown to most Canadian historians, but Risk has exerted an important influence on legal history scholars associated with law faculties. His stature is acknowledged by two scholars of international repute, Robert Gordon and David Sugarman, and his body of work and its effect are assessed in an insightful chapter by G. Blaine Baker.Most of the contributors to the Risk festschrift are involved with law schools, and the tone of most chapters tends towards classic legal history. Many of the contributions will challenge undergraduate students of history or criminal justice. Exceptions include Constance Backhouse's study of a racially motivated murder of a member of the Onyota'a:ka (Oneida) First Nation in 1902, a case study that underscores the lack of research on race and law in Canadian history. Hamar Foster's examination of Indian title in British Columbia and John McLaren's article on Chinese criminality in British Columbia from 1890 to 1920 also have broader appeal than mainstream legal history. White society "racialized" the Chinese not only through stereotypes, but through criminal law and law enforcement, especially in the areas of gambling, prostitution and opium smoking. McLaren indicates that although the Chinese in British Columbia were subjected to legal and bureaucratic racism, police harassment and informal discrimination, as a "despised minority" they also appealed to the rule of law and the courts for protection. On a more mundane level they utilized the civil courts for disputed commercial transactions. Because most criminal convictions against the Chinese were summary offences, it was rare for them to surface in appeal courts. Yet according to McLaren, appellate judges in British Columbia were guided by law, not racial prejudice, in many of their rulings involving the Chinese.Peter Oliver's chapter on the judiciary in the historiography of Upper Canada offers a counter-revisionist critique of recent interpretations that condemn the colonial elite's manipulation of the legal system under the constitution of 1791. For much of the twentieth century, conservative and "consensus" historians of Upper Canada regarded judges and other members of the legal elite in a positive manner and dismissed radical reformers such as William Lyon Mackenzie as "demagogues." Early nineteenth-century reformers had complained loudly over the administration of justice, particularly when it was abused by Tory magistrates and judges for political ends. In recent years, scholars examining treason, sedition, libel and a number of celebrated murder trials have portrayed the Tory elite as subverting the rule of law. According to Oliver, it was the appointed judges, not popular politicians, who pressed for law reform prior to the 1840s - reforms such as the notable diminution of capital offences in 1833, jail reform and prisoners' rights. …