Bonilla, Daniel

Daniel Bonilla is  full professor of law and a lawyer at Universidad de los Andes and Doctor and master's degree in Law from Yale University. At this same institution, he has served as a visiting professor, as well as at Sciences Po-Paris and at the universities of Brasilia, Fordham, U. of the State of Georgia, U. of Texas, Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law , U. of Puerto Rico, Autonomous Technological Institute of Mexico and in the National of Colombia.

Universidad: 
Australian National University
Fecha de llegada: 
Ostirala, Uztaila 1, 2016 -tik Ostirala, Uztaila 29, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
University of Tasmania
Fecha de llegada: 
Larunbata, Uztaila 2, 2016 -tik Ostirala, Uztaila 29, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
Flinders University
Fecha de llegada: 
Astelehena, Ekaina 27, 2016 -tik Astelehena, Uztaila 4, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
Edith Cowan University
Fecha de llegada: 
Asteartea, Ekaina 21, 2016 -tik Larunbata, Uztaila 2, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
University of Bialystok
Fecha de llegada: 
Larunbata, Maiatza 21, 2016 -tik Igandea, Maiatza 29, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
Université de Paris X-Nanterre
Fecha de llegada: 
Asteartea, Maiatza 10, 2016 -tik Osteguna, Maiatza 19, 2016 -ra
Universidad: 
University of Leeds
Fecha de llegada: 
Astelehena, Maiatza 9, 2016 -tik Osteguna, Maiatza 19, 2016 -ra

Social Dynamics of Crime and Control. New Theories for a World in Transition

Editors: Susanne Karstedt & Kai-D Bussmann

2000 , 271 p. , ISBN: 9781841131641

Legal Institutions and Collective MemoriesThis book assembles essays by leading scholars in their fields of criminology and socio-legal studies. John Braithwaite, John Hagan, Jack Katz, Nicola Lacey, Michael Levi, Joan McCord, Dario Melossi, Steven Messner and Richard Rosenfeld explore new directions in contemporary theorising about the impact of social and cultural dynamics on crime and social control.

Krygier, Martin

Martin Krygier is Gordon Samuels Professor of Law and Social Theory at the University of New South Wales, co-director of its Network for Interdisciplinary Studies of Law, Adjunct Professor at the Regulatory Institutions Network, Australian National University, and a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences. His most recent book is Philip Selznick. Ideals in the World, (Stanford U P 2012).

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