:: : Well, the only terms I'm familiar with would be those associated with criminal justice : Retributive justice, Deterrence ( legal ), Incapacitation ( penology ), Rehabilitation ( penology ).
32.
"In the case of Milosevic, you're talking of a bridge too far, of a class of people who need the full panoply of retributive justice, an Al Capone-type trial, " said Rotberg.
33.
Armenian historian Vahakn N . Dadrian commented that the Allied efforts at prosecution were an example of " a retributive justice [ that ] gave way to expedience of political accommodation ".
34.
His strong views on confiscation policy ( what some called " retributive justice " ) put him at odds with the United States Supreme Court by 1869, and generated intense controversy in Virginia.
35.
They maintain that retribution differs from revenge, in that retributive justice is only directed at wrongs, has inherent limits, is not personal, involves no pleasure at the suffering of others and employs procedural standards.
36.
He cautioned that retributive justice would not heal the nation's wounds . " " While the retributive justice system and imprisonment may have served the purpose of punishing offenders, it will not lead to healing and reconciliation, ""
37.
He cautioned that retributive justice would not heal the nation's wounds . " " While the retributive justice system and imprisonment may have served the purpose of punishing offenders, it will not lead to healing and reconciliation, ""
38.
There was " abundant empirical evidence " ( although Bosielo cited none ) that retributive justice had " failed to stem the ever-increasing wave of crime, " to say nothing of " the public hysteria " generated by it.
39.
In areas where the land had long been dedicated to small-scale, growing-season leases of farmland, called conacre, opposition was conceived as " retributive justice " that was intended " to correct transgressions against traditional moral and social codes ".
40.
Eg . bottom of page 361 : " retributive justice arises when one individual observers another's act that breaks a rule . . . " ( cut short here by google, just when it was getting really interesting ).