Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Penal_populism> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Penal_populism abstract "Penal populism is a process whereby the major political parties compete with each other to be "tough on crime". It is generally associated with a public perception that crime is out of control and tends to manifest at general elections when politicians put forward hard-line policies which would remand more offenders into prison prior to sentencing and impose longer sentences. Penal populism generally reflects the disenchantment felt by a distinct segment of society - crime victims and their representatives - who believe they have been left out, or simply forgotten, by justice processes which focus on the offender. It leads to the pursuit of penal policies designed to win votes rather than reduce crime or promote justice.".
- Penal_populism wikiPageExternalLink julian.roberts.
- Penal_populism wikiPageExternalLink john-pratt.aspx.
- Penal_populism wikiPageID "34450349".
- Penal_populism wikiPageLength "14517".
- Penal_populism wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- Penal_populism wikiPageRevisionID "676161257".
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxon.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxons.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Anthony_Bottoms.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Bailey_Junior_Kurariki.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Cambridge_University.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Criminology.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Category:Populism.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Criminologist.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Criminology.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Deterrence_(legal).
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Fear_of_crime.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Garth_McVicar.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink James_Patrick_Bulger.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Law_and_order_(politics).
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Megans_Law.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Moral_authority.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Murder_of_James_Bulger.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Napier,_New_Zealand.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_University.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Political_party.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Populism.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Rational_choice_theory_(criminology).
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Sensible_Sentencing_Trust.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Tabloid_journalism.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Three-strikes_law.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Three_strikes_law.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Cambridge.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Oxford.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLink Victoria_University_of_Wellington.
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLinkText "Penal populism".
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLinkText "penal populism".
- Penal_populism wikiPageWikiLinkText "skyrocketing of prison populations".
- Penal_populism hasPhotoCollection Penal_populism.
- Penal_populism wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Penal_populism subject Category:Criminology.
- Penal_populism subject Category:Populism.
- Penal_populism hypernym Process.
- Penal_populism type Election.
- Penal_populism comment "Penal populism is a process whereby the major political parties compete with each other to be "tough on crime". It is generally associated with a public perception that crime is out of control and tends to manifest at general elections when politicians put forward hard-line policies which would remand more offenders into prison prior to sentencing and impose longer sentences.".
- Penal_populism label "Penal populism".
- Penal_populism sameAs 형벌_포퓰리즘.
- Penal_populism sameAs m.0h_cdk4.
- Penal_populism sameAs Q7162154.
- Penal_populism sameAs Q7162154.
- Penal_populism wasDerivedFrom Penal_populism?oldid=676161257.
- Penal_populism isPrimaryTopicOf Penal_populism.