Showing 1 - 19 results of 19 for search 'crime writer', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
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    Penser l’écocide au XIXe siècle : crimes contre la nature, châtiment divin et vengeance de la Terre by Samy Bounoua

    Published 2020-12-01
    “…The notion of ecocide, which literally refers to the destruction of an inhabited space, becomes increasingly relevant in the debate on environmental law, and in particular on the legal definition of crime against nature. We want to show in this article that the idea of ecocide is older than the word : since the beginning of the 19th century, in the West, many (scientists, philosophers, naturalists, essay writers, etc.) have worried about the growth of the environmental damages, considering them as transgressions, and even as crimes committed against God’s creation or, in a more secular spirit, against a nature which should have remained untouched, for the good of mankind. …”
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    « La vision d’un monde marquée par les pratiques locales » au prisme du roman policier – entre « villes » et « campagnes » by Daisuke Fukunishi

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Within works of both genres, writers create worlds based on local practices. Additionally, the ethnographic concept of the “marebito” (guest/visitor/outsider) can be found within crime fiction. …”
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    “Signing off on the right side of History?” Relating in Louise Welsh’s apocalyptic trilogy by Marie-Odile PITTIN-HEDON

    Published 2022-06-01
    “…This article examines the way the Scottish writer Louise Welsh contributes to the trend of postapocalyptic fiction in the 21st century, with her plague times trilogy. …”
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    Genet et l’Eros Détective : Pilorge, Weidmann by Christine Marcandier

    Published 2018-12-01
    “…Jean Genet is, like many writers of his generation, a great reader of Detective, in which he finds many subjects of his works (Les Bonnes). …”
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    Le travail de Rithy Panh : un appareil funéraire by Martine Lefeuvre-Déotte

    Published 2016-03-01
    “…The Cambodian director and writer, Rithy Panh, born in 1962 in Phnom Penh, is a survivor of the genocide perpetraded by the Pol Pot regime (1975-1979). …”
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    Avec X. en route pour B. by Oliver Lubrich

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The Secret Journey (1949) by Marcel Jouhandeau (1888-1979) is the story of a forbidden love, but the poetic novel is also a crime story. It contains hidden clues that betray the author and reveal the historical context: In autumn 1941, a French writer takes part in a propaganda tour of Nazi Germany at the invitation of Joseph Goebbels. …”
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    The Liminal Space between Imprisonment and Freedom: by Shruti Das, Mirza Ibrahim Beg, Ranjit Mandal

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Musa remains oblivious to the crime he has been charged with until just before his impending release. …”
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    Fálétí’s Philosophical Sensibility by Adeshina Afolayan

    Published 2021-12-01
    “… Let us begin with an unfortunate fact: Adébáyọ̀ Fálétí is one major writer that is hardly anthologized. The problem could not have been that he wrote in Yorùbá because Fágúnwà is far more anthologized than he is. …”
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    Herkules Poirot i marny kryminał. Na marginesie powieści Agathy Christie „Morderstwo w Orient Expressie” (1934) by Anna Gemra

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Van Dine and Ronald Knox) intended for writers meaning to craft a good crime story. In Murder on the Orient Express, Agatha Christie reached for many solutions well known to readers from ‘poor crime stories,’ such as the appearance of the murderer, basing the investigation on hunches instead of deduction, introducing more than one villain, etc. …”
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    INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FRAMEWORK ON HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND CRIMINAL LIABILITY ON TRAFFICKERS by Paul Nwala

    Published 2023-07-01
    “…Human trafficking, as recognised in the Declaration of the High-level Meeting on the Rule of Law Trafficking in Persons, preys on the vulnerability of victims and can be considered as a premeditated crime. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), as guardian of the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (UNTOC) and the Protocols thereto, assists States in their efforts to implement the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons (Trafficking in Persons Protocol). …”
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    Aspekty proceduralne sprawy Gorgonowej by Józef Koredczuk

    Published 2024-05-01
    “…It was attended as participants by the best-known Lviv and Krakow judges, lawyers (Maurycy Axer) and medical experts (Ludwik Hirszfeld, Jan Olbracht), all of whom found it to be the most famous case of their careers. Writers (Tadeusz Boy- Żeleński) also took an interest in the case. …”
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    The Great Vietnamese Famine of 1944-45 Revisited by Geoffrey Gunn

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…It survives in local memory and in fiction by Vietnamese writers.4The great famine was never construed as a war crime by the Allies, yet the question of blame, alongside agency or lack of it, was an issue between the French and the Viet Minh in the immediate aftermath of the Japanese surrender and entered into propaganda recriminations. …”
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    Viols nazis en Drôme (1944) by Franck Tison

    Published 2021-02-01
    “…What with “opportunistic” rape or mass-rape as in St Donat sur l’Herbasse, in the Vercors, or in the Drôme valley, this criminal practice brought about hundreds victims.The german command made use of the Ost-Legion’s Mongols giving them a free hand to carry out their crimes on women and very young girls. Such hard facts, that were conjured up during the Nuremberg trials, aroused indignation among refugee-writers in La Drôme, such as Charles de Richter or Louis Aragon.…”
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    Muslim Turcophobia: A Study of Two Missionary Authors by Murat Köylü

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The common characteristics of these writers are that they fictionalize alleged inhumane crimes against Christians and present them as if they were true, and that they unconditionally support Greeks and Armenians, whom they see as the real owners of Anatolia. …”
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    Graham Greene’s Journey Without Maps and the Fascination of the Abomination by John AIREY

    Published 2009-07-01
    “…The narrator of this travel book shows himself to be fascinated by what is abominable: disease, war crimes, cruelty and nightmares are the main examples in the text. …”
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