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DTSTAMP:20260413T085328
DTSTART:20160322T114500
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TRANSP:OPAQUE
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URL:https://murmitoyen.com/events/vanille/udem/detail/681973
LOCATION:Université de Montréal - Carrefour des arts et des sciences\, 31
 50\, rue Jean-Brillant \, Montréal\, QC\, Canada\, H3T 1N8
SUMMARY:The Harper Decade: Why Didn’t Canada Become a High Imprisonment C
 ountry?
DESCRIPTION:Guest speaker : Anthony DoobAnthony Doob is a professor emerit
 us of criminology at the University of Toronto. He has carried out researc
 h in a number of quite different areas within criminology including senten
 cing\, youth justice\, attitudes about criminal justice and the history of
  Canadian criminal justice policy. Summary  As far as we can tell\, Cana
 da\, today has an imprisonment rate only slightly higher than it was when 
 the Harper government took control in 2006\, notwithstanding the fact that
  during the Harper decade\, at least 42 separate crime bills were passed b
 y Parliament\, most of which contained sections that would appear to have 
 had the goal of increasing the level of punishment directed at those convi
 cted of offences.What is it that “protected” Canada from a more punit
 ive turn? Why is it that a government that prided itself as being “tough
  on crime” did not apparently succeed in increasing imprisonment dramati
 cally?Information Conférence présentée par le Centre international d
 e criminologie comparée
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