Crime and State in History

Crime and State in History

This is the second assignment.The file is attached.Due date is 13th of NovemberCourse: Crime and State in HistoryCourse description and lecture outline:This course explores dramatic, historical transformations in the perception and definition of crime and the administration of criminal law. Popular assumptions in common law countries about the evolution of law enforcement, prosecutions and the rights of the accused, the role of counsel, judges and juries in public trials, as well as punishment, are broadly examined. The course approach sets criminal law evolution in an organic, socio-political context—nothing happens in a vacuum—and moves from the arrival of the Normans in England to the early nineteenth-century, traces the adoption of the English criminal law system in Canada [ French /aboriginal Canada, the NWMP & opening of the west ], and thereafter shifts into selected issues in law, crime and society such as the historical treatment of women, war crimes, the current age of ‘terrorism,’ and the health of the rule of law in the 21st century.1- Introduction   (Conceptualizing Legal History and Origins of Canada’s System)The Roman legacy, what William found after Hastings by way of local ‘criminal law’2- Eighteenth Century England3- Nineteenth Century England: The Great Transformation – Reform or More Efficient Repression?4- The Reception of English Criminal Law in Canad5- Law Enforcement, the Rise of Police and Public Prosecutions6- The Criminal Trial and Legal Personnel7- Punishment8- Conquest, the Experience of Native Peoples and Minorities9- The Experiences of Women10- Politics and the Rule of Law in Canada