Search results for "remand"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Nordic penal exceptionalism: A comparative, empirical analysis

2022

Abstract Based on a survey administered in 13 prisons in England & Wales and Norway, as part of a research programme with explicitly comparative aims, this article seeks to address both the relative and absolute dimensions of the Nordic penal exceptionalism thesis. It outlines the consistently more positive results in Norway compared to England & Wales, explaining them primarily with reference to the former’s much higher quality and use of open prisons. At the same time, it emphasizes that, even in an unusually humane prison system, prisoners report considerable pain and frustration. The article also makes the case that comparative analysis should strive to be systematic, but that s…

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Social Psychologyremandopen prisonsNordic exceptionalismVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Rettsvitenskap: 340imprisonmentLawVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Sosiologi: 220Pathology and Forensic MedicineThe British Journal of Criminology
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Compensating acquitted pre-trial detainees

2015

Abstract Western legal systems are far from having provided the same solution to the problem of whether acquitted pre-trial detainees should be compensated for the harm suffered as a result of detention on remand. Various arguments have been formulated in order to justify or criticize this compensation, but the possible incentive effects of this compensation on criminal behavior has not yet been considered. This paper analyzes these effects, focusing on the case where detention was lawfully and diligently carried out by State agents, and not having been caused by negligence on the part of the detainee. The paper shows that such compensation can either deter crime or encourage it, depending …

Economics and EconometricsHarmIncentiveLawState liabilitySocial WelfareBusinessCriminal procedureTortRemand (detention)Criminal behaviorLawFinanceInternational Review of Law and Economics
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Guarding, guiding, gate opening: Prison officer work in a Norwegian welfare context

2017

Anne A is a prison officer, and for years, she has been working behind the walls—in low-security and high-security wings, with remand and sentenced prisoners. She says: We are there fifty per cent in order to keep an eye on them, to ensure that they stay here [in prison]. The other fifty per cent we are trying to help them. They may be drug users or have other problems, and it’s just as much our duty to help them as to watch them. And when we help, this contributes to security just as much as a locked door or an alarm.

Engineeringbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesContext (language use)Prison0506 political scienceManagementOfficerWork (electrical)Order (business)Law050602 political science & public administration050501 criminologyRemand (court procedure)businessDutyWelfare0505 lawmedia_common
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