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PLATO'S THEORY OF INCARCERATION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2021

Jacob Abolafia*
Affiliation:
Polonsky Academy, Van Leer Jerusalem [email protected]
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Extract

In addition to its many famous innovations in popular government, the Athenian democracy seems to have also experimented with another, more ambivalent political institution familiar to modern societies—penal incarceration. In recent years, there has been renewed debate over the precise role of imprisonment in Athens, as an increasing number of voices, including Marcus Folch in this volume, make the case that imprisonment was an important point of contact between criminal punishment and democratic politics and society in Athens.

Type
II. Incarceration
Copyright
Copyright © Ramus 2021

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References

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