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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
161

Identification parades : upholding the integrity of the criminal justice process?

Tinley, Yvette Marie January 2001 (has links)
Evidence from eyewitnesses is often the starting point for police investigations and it is estimated that it plays an important role in one quarter of all contested Crown Court cases. However, the memory is a fragile and malleable instrument which can produce unreliable yet convincing evidence. Because mistaken witnesses can be both honest and compelling, the risk of wrongful conviction in eyewitness identification cases is high, as is illustrated in a number of famous miscarriages of justice. This thesis assesses the sufficiency of the protections offered to defendants in cases involving eyewitness identification by examining psychological research on memory, police procedures for the collection of evidence from eyewitnesses, and judicial discretion to exclude unreliable evidence found in \(R\) \(v\) \(Turnbull\) and section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act. In interview, startling levels of guessing were reported by witnesses attending identification procedures; and suspects were largely unaware of their rights. Current identification procedures are time-consuming and inefficient; and psychological research offers some guidance but few answers, precluding the usefulness of expert evidence. The thesis concludes that an increase in specialised identification officers, reform of procedures to allow for greater use of video identification, guidelines on the exercise of discretion under s.78, and judicial education regarding the importance of using a comprehensive \(Turnbull\) direction are required before an adequate level of procedural and evidential protection against erroneous identification can be offered to suspects.
162

"The shame of our community": authors' views of prostitutes in late eighteenth century England

Gillard, Shannon Elayne 15 November 2004 (has links)
This thesis attempts to identify authors' attitudes toward late eighteenth century London prostitutes. Through the examination of several selected sources, one can isolate feelings that eighteenth century writers had about prostitution and those who practiced it. In these works, prostitutes were always rendered as of the lower orders, which the authors acknowledged and emphasized in their writings. What is striking is that none of these authors acknowledged the culpability of the male in the client-prostitute relationship. Therefore, in a close examination of eighteenth century authors' views of prostitutes, one can find both classist and sexist attitudes. The incorrect formulation of the situation is ironic, given that most of the writers of such works were attempting to reform English society and devalue the debauchery and lust that prostitution represented to them. The thesis begins by providing historical background of the lives of prostitutes in late eighteenth century England, showing that the prostitutes provided services to men of higher social and economic classes than they were, and were often young and economically disadvantaged. The main textual chapters are divided into three sections: the first examines works directly related to the Magdalen Charity for repentant prostitutes, namely sermons and titles written to govern or establish the charity, and finds that the authors of these works viewed the prostitute as someone who needed to be instructed in the correct ways to live her life. The second analyzes short works written to address what their writers saw as the problem of prostitution, and discovers that although these writers found different reasons for the causes of prostitution, they all agreed that prostitutes debased society and needed to reform so that the nation would not be ruined. The third researches works of fiction and advice literature, and determines that although women in these works were presented as wealthier than actual prostitutes were, they nonetheless were of the lower orders and should protect themselves from clever and seductive men. The conclusion emphasizes the ways that this study provides new insight into the problem of prostitution and how that relates to race and class in modern society.
163

Dandyism: Creating a Tradition for Consumption in London Society

Carlson, Heidi 01 January 2012 (has links)
A look at English dandyism during the early nineteenth century and its link to masculine consumerism through the topics of fashion, English caricature and London's developing cityscape.
164

"The shame of our community": authors' views of prostitutes in late eighteenth century England

Gillard, Shannon Elayne 15 November 2004 (has links)
This thesis attempts to identify authors' attitudes toward late eighteenth century London prostitutes. Through the examination of several selected sources, one can isolate feelings that eighteenth century writers had about prostitution and those who practiced it. In these works, prostitutes were always rendered as of the lower orders, which the authors acknowledged and emphasized in their writings. What is striking is that none of these authors acknowledged the culpability of the male in the client-prostitute relationship. Therefore, in a close examination of eighteenth century authors' views of prostitutes, one can find both classist and sexist attitudes. The incorrect formulation of the situation is ironic, given that most of the writers of such works were attempting to reform English society and devalue the debauchery and lust that prostitution represented to them. The thesis begins by providing historical background of the lives of prostitutes in late eighteenth century England, showing that the prostitutes provided services to men of higher social and economic classes than they were, and were often young and economically disadvantaged. The main textual chapters are divided into three sections: the first examines works directly related to the Magdalen Charity for repentant prostitutes, namely sermons and titles written to govern or establish the charity, and finds that the authors of these works viewed the prostitute as someone who needed to be instructed in the correct ways to live her life. The second analyzes short works written to address what their writers saw as the problem of prostitution, and discovers that although these writers found different reasons for the causes of prostitution, they all agreed that prostitutes debased society and needed to reform so that the nation would not be ruined. The third researches works of fiction and advice literature, and determines that although women in these works were presented as wealthier than actual prostitutes were, they nonetheless were of the lower orders and should protect themselves from clever and seductive men. The conclusion emphasizes the ways that this study provides new insight into the problem of prostitution and how that relates to race and class in modern society.
165

John Soane und die Bank of England 1788 bis 1833 /

Schumann-Bacia, Eva-Maria, January 1990 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Diss.--Freiburg im Breisgau, 1987. / Bibliogr. p. 373-375.
166

Das "Anglikanische Ordinale" : eine liturgiegeschichtliche und liturgietheologische Studie /

Feulner, Hans-Jürgen, January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Lizenziatsarbeit--München--Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 1992. Titre de soutenance : Das "Anglikanische Ordinale" von 1550 : seine vorreformatorischen Wurzeln und seine Entstehung.
167

The Church of England in industrialising society : the Lancashire parish of Whalley in the eighteenth century /

Snape, Michael Francis, January 2003 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Ph. D.--Birmingham--University, 1994. Titre de soutenance : "Our happy Reformation" : Anglicanism and society in a northern parish, 1689-1789. / Bibliogr. p. 201-216. Index.
168

Richard Hooker and reformed theology : a study of reason, will, and grace /

Voak, Nigel. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis--Faculty for English language and literature--Oxford--University, 1999. / Bibliogr. p. 331-342. Index.
169

Who are church schools for? : towards an ecclesiology for Church of England voluntary aided secondary schools.

Shepherd, Peter William. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Open University. BLDSC no. DX233107.
170

Für Glauben und Krone die katholische Aristokratie in England 1603 - 1649

Polikovskaja, Anna January 2008 (has links)
Zugl.: Freiburg (Breisgau), Univ., Diss., 2008

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