Tanzimat and Penal Modernity: The Abolition of Torture in the Mid-Nineteenth Century

This book studies the abolition of torture in the Ottoman Empire from 1840s up until the mid-1860s as a component of newly-raised Tanzimat legislation and the Ottoman judicial transformation.  This study aims to investigate the context in which the anti-torture law took place and how this official policy came into practice after relevant laws and regulations issued by the Sublime Porte.

The anti-torture law was an outcome of a global legislative wave against body-oriented punitive methods. Beyond legal aspect, however, this book tries to concentrate on its utilization in everyday court practices by ordinary Ottoman subjects. Moreover, it reevaluates foreign diplomatic pressure on the Tanzimat statesmen about ongoing practice of unlawful torture thus establishing a bond between a global legislative trend and simple judicial strategies of Ottomans.


Satın Al

Künye

Kitabın Adı:

Tanzimat and Penal Modernity: The Abolition of Torture in the Mid-Nineteenth Century

Hazırlayan:

Tuna Başıbek

Dizi Adı:

Tarih - 156

Baskı Adedi:

100

Yayın Yılı:
2016
Sayfa:
139
Ebat:

13.5 x 21 cm.

Kağıt:

Enzo 70gr.

Kapak:

Bora Gürsoy

Cilt/Kapak:

250 gr. Mat, Amerikan Bristrol, 4 renk

ISBN/Barkod:

978-605-9022-78-1

İçindekiler

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

CHAPTER

NTRODUCTION

CHAPTER

THEORETICAL ELABORATION AND  A HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF TORTURE AND ITS USE AND  ABOLITION IN THE OTTOMAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM

Defining Torture and Its Application before the

Mid-Eighteenth Century

Theoretical Considerations on Torture

Torture on the Course

The Abolition of Torture and Corporal Punishment

CHAPTER

THE TORTURED BODIES OF OTTOMAN SUBJECTS AND NINETEENTH CENTURY LIBERALISM

The Anti-Torture Law in Tanzimat Diplomacy Diplomatic Intervention and Its Immediate Results in the Provinces

CHAPTER

THE SOCIAL CONTENT OF ANTI-TORTURE LAW AND POPULAR DISCOURSES OF TANZIMAT LAW

The Anti-Torture Law in Ottoman Daily Life Legal Stratagems of Ordinary Ottomans: "I Said The First Thing Which Came To My Mind

CONCLUSION

BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX