The Rise and Fall of the Rehabilitative Ideal in Italian Criminal Justice
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        Elisabetta Grande
        
 
Since 1930, when the code of criminal law presently in force was enacted, Italian sentencing system has been profoundly affected by many reforms. As a result, the whole system came under attack as being ineffective, uncertain, often having a merely symbolic function. The paper focuses on the reasons for the deception with the Italian criminal sanctioning system and on the solutions proposed to restore its credibility. One lesson that can be learned observing the Italian system in action is that any theoretical project, concerning sentencing and sentence execution, has always to take into serious consideration the political and economic commitment that a system is ready to offer in order to implement it.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontiers Article
 - Hard Code Now!
 - The Common Core of European Private Law in Boxes and Bundles
 - The Politics of European Contract Law: Who has an Interest in What Kind of Contract Law for Europe?
 - Judicial Cooperation in the European Courts: Testing Three Models of Judicial Behavior
 - Advances Article
 - North America as a Medieval Legal Construction
 - Human Rights Risk, Infrastructure Projects and Developing Countries
 - Intellectual Property Rights and Legal Order
 - Constitutional Courts in New Democracies: Understanding Variation in East Asia
 - Topics Article
 - Foreign Inspired Courts as Agencies of Peace in Troubled Societies. A Plea for Realism and for Creativity.
 - Legislative incursions into modern trusts doctrine in England: The Trustee Act 2000 and the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999
 - The Rise and Fall of the Rehabilitative Ideal in Italian Criminal Justice
 - Conflict of Interests and the Fair Dealing Duty