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Culture and Criminal Justice: A Theory of Relational Justice

Author

  • Jianhong Liu, Faculty of Law, University of Macau

    Professor Jianhong Liu is a Distinguished Professor at University of Macau. He is the winner of 2016 American Society of Criminology International Division’s “Freda Adler Distinguished International Scholar Award” and the winner of 2018 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences’ “G. O.W. Mueller Award for Distinguished Contribution to International Criminal Justice”. He is currently the Elected President of the Scientific Commission of the International Society for Criminology (2014-), the elected Chairman of the General Assembly of the Asian Criminological Society (2016-), and a member of the steering committee of Campbell Collaboration’s Crime and Justice Group (2009-). Professor Liu was the Founding and Honorary President of Asian Criminological Society (2009 – 2015). He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Asian Journal of Criminology (Springer publishing, SSCI indexed Journal), the Editor of “Springer Series on Asian Criminology & Criminal Justice”, and a member of the editorial boards of more than 20 international academic journals, including top ranked journals such as British Journal of Criminology and other top ranked journals such as Journal of Experimental Criminology. Professor Liu’s primary research interest is Comparative Criminology and comparative criminal justice. He is a leading figure in the development of Asian Criminology. Much of his research focuses on crime and justice in Asia and China. Prof Liu has more than 190 academic publications including books, journal articles, and book chapters. You can obtain most of his publications from his Research Gate Webpage: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jianhong_Liu2

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.69689/ek6dqa88
Speech | Published Date: 2019-01-27 | Access to Full Text: PDF | Vol. 11 No. 1 (2019)

Keywords:

Culture, Criminal Justice, Relational Justice

Abstract

Prominent Enlightenment scholars such as Bentham, Voltaire, Helvetius, and Quetelet recognized the value of comparative inquiry, systematically contrasting features of crime and justice in their own nations with those of others. “Comparative criminology is as old as criminology itself.” However, interest in comparisons waned throughout much of the 19th and early 20th century, “as nations looked inward”.  Comparative inquiry once again began to capture the interest of criminologists in the middle years of the 20th century – a development that Bennett characterized as an especially beneficial “revival.”  Yet 20 years after Bennett’s pronouncement of this welcome development, Farrington in his 2000 Presidential Address to the American Society of Criminology assessed that “cross-national comparative studies in criminology are important but relatively infrequent”. Comparative criminology gained importance in recently years again. The increasing pace of globalization means that criminologists can no longer ignore the legal systems and the work of legal practitioners outside their own countries. However, for the most part, comparative research has mainly been conducted by Western researchers with the aim of reflecting on how their own criminal justice systems have developed. They have made comparisons with criminal justice systems in other Western countries. For non-western countries, research has produced a large number of useful descriptions of criminal justice systems in different countries. There is a fairly large literature written in English about crime and criminal justice in Asian countries, published in the Asian Journal of Criminology. There is also a sophisticated interdisciplinary literature about comparison in the fields of comparative law, socio-legal studies, criminology and sociology. However, few theorists or researchers from non-Western have contributed to these literatures. 

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How to Cite

Liu, J. (2019). Culture and Criminal Justice: A Theory of Relational Justice. Annual Conference of the Asian Criminological Society, 11(1), 1-41. https://doi.org/10.69689/ek6dqa88

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