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This book is a comprehensive inquiry into the rehabilitation of
criminal offenders and is based on extensive cross-cultural
research on legal, ethical, philosophical, psychological, and
sociological aspects of rehabilitation. Materials from these
disciplines are integrated into a cohesive argument for a new
concept of rehabilitation. Particularly innovative is the book's
differentiation between various historical models that have been
generally confounded until now, the distinction between an
authoritarian and a liberty-centered concept of rehabilitation, the
development of the latter into the notion of rehabilitation as a
right and the definition of this right essentially as an
opportunity. Beyond its contribution to theory, the book is also
intended to shape policy and practices. After dealing with the
general issues of the history of rehabilitation, the author
chronicles the evolution of the idea from ancient China to the
present and compares the legislative impact of this evolution in
Anglo-American and civil law systems. Four historical models of
rehabilitation are defined and examined. Rotman clarifies the
controversy over rehabilitation by responding in detail to the full
range of recent criticisms of the rehabilitative idea. After
examining the complex interrelation of rehabilitation with
imprisonment, the book reviews a number of past and present forms
of rehabilitation in the community, with an eye for their potential
for future development. Particular attention is given to
rehabilitation of mentally disordered offenders, including the
special treatment of sex offenders and European social therapeutic
establishments. The book's audience will include anyone interested
in law, sociology and criminal justice.
At a time when financial crime routinely crosses international
boundaries, this book provides a novel understanding of its spread
and criminalisation. It traces the international convergence of
financial crime regulation with a uniquely comparative approach
that examines key institutional and state actors including the
European Union, the International Organization of Securities
Commissions, as well as the United States, the United Kingdom,
Switzerland, France, Italy and Germany, all countries that harbour
some of the most influential stock exchanges in the Western world.
The book describes and documents the phenomenon of
internationalisation of securities frauds - such as insider trading
and market manipulation - and the laws criminalising those acts,
most notably those responding to recent dramatic transformations in
securities markets, high frequency trading, and benchmark
manipulation. At the European level, it shows the progressive
uniformisation of laws culminating in the 2014 European Union
Market Abuse Regulation. The book argues that criminal prohibitions
against internationalised market abuse must be understood as an
economic and legal imperative to protect financial markets against
activities that imperil its integrity, compromising the confidence
of investors and thus affecting the economy as a whole. The book is
supported by an extensive review of the most significant
scholarship in each country.
At a time when financial crime routinely crosses international
boundaries, this book provides a novel understanding of its spread
and criminalisation. It traces the international convergence of
financial crime regulation with a uniquely comparative approach
that examines key institutional and state actors including the
European Union, the International Organization of Securities
Commissions, as well as the United States, the United Kingdom,
Switzerland, France, Italy and Germany, all countries that harbour
some of the most influential stock exchanges in the Western world.
The book describes and documents the phenomenon of
internationalisation of securities frauds - such as insider trading
and market manipulation - and the laws criminalising those acts,
most notably those responding to recent dramatic transformations in
securities markets, high frequency trading, and benchmark
manipulation. At the European level, it shows the progressive
uniformisation of laws culminating in the 2014 European Union
Market Abuse Regulation. The book argues that criminal prohibitions
against internationalised market abuse must be understood as an
economic and legal imperative to protect financial markets against
activities that imperil its integrity, compromising the confidence
of investors and thus affecting the economy as a whole. The book is
supported by an extensive review of the most significant
scholarship in each country.
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