cover image: The Criminal Law Journal  Journal  1952

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The Criminal Law Journal Journal 1952

1952

The second stage in the development of the science of penology in the West was the one wherein the idea of social defence and protection against crimes caught the imagination of the Jurists. [...] L. J. PENOLOG (Continued The cognate conception in the evolution of penology in the West that thus developed is that the criminal is reformable and should be reformed and not punished for the mere sake of punishment and that punishment should take the form of schmes directed for the reformation of the criminal and for converting him into a useful citizen of the society. [...] The first rays of the dawn of some conceptions of modern penology seem to have appeared in theory for the first time in Europe in the form of the Declaration by the Revolutionary Assembly in 179t in England to the effect that penalties should be proportioned to the crimes and that they were inflicted not merely to punish but also to reform the culprit. [...] The most modern criminologists of the present century of the Western countries are thinking of abolishing punishments corporal and afflictive and of devising other means of supplanting them by some measures for the safety of the society and the rehabilitation of the criminal. [...] If he wants to avail himself of the provisions of S. 3 and at the same time avoid the pitfall of pronouncing a decision which is contrary to law his only course is to call for the original judment from the records of the Court and follow it It will not be open to the single Judge to rfuse to follow the decision contained in the uofficial report merely because the decision is not reported
law
Pages
88
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.120178
Segment Pages Author Actions
Frontmatter
1-1 S. Rao view
Spot Light on Panchayat Raj Act
2-4 Ishaq Khan view
Hindu Penology or Hindu Jurisprudence and the Need of its Assimilation in the Modern System of Penology in India
4-9 Thakur Dubey view
Unofficial Reports and the Law Reports Act 1875
9-10 unknown view
Criminal Breach of Trust Extends to Immovable Property
10-11 Shrinath Srivastava view
Section 156 (3) Criminal P. C.: The Stage at and Circumstances Under Which Magistrate May Order Police Investigation into Cogn Zable Cases
11-13 Tirithdas Wadhwani view
The All-India Bar Committee
13-15 unknown view
Abatement of Criminal Case on the Death of the Complainant
16-i K.V. Subrahmanyam view
The Chief Justice of India
17-34 unknown view
Affidavit its Meaning Use and Abuse in the Administration of Justice
34-38 Tirithdas Wadhwani view
Power of the High Court to Summarily Dismiss an Appeal Against Conviction
38-39 Vaikunthlal Thakkar view
Has the Code of Criminal Procedure Been Left Inarticulate?
39-48 Shrinath Srivastava view
Can Court Insist on Local Bailors?
48-48 Shrinath Srivastava view
Inherent Powers of Sessions Judges
49-59 T.P. Dubey view
Reviews
59-60 unknown view
Sir Maurice Gwyer
60-76 unknown view

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