The concept of law and punishment has been explored by many philosophers and legal theorists throughout history, making it difficult to attribute it to a single author. Notable figures include ancient legislators like Hammurabi, who created one of the earliest known legal codes, and more modern thinkers like Cesare Beccaria, who wrote "On Crimes and Punishments" in the 18th century, advocating for reforms in criminal justice. Each contributed to the evolving understanding of law and punishment in society.
The poem Punishment in Kindergarten was written by Kamala Das
The most common punishment was death
The punishment for culpable homicide in South African law is extremely varied. It depends greatly on how the crime was committed. The punishment can range from a fine to years in prison.
punishment theory
Assuming you meant the question to read as you wrote it. Doctors are not punished for abiding laws. If you meant breaking rather than abiding then, I believe that is determined in detail on a case by case manner in a court of law.
In Islamic law, the punishment for rape is severe and can include imprisonment, flogging, or even the death penalty, depending on the circumstances and the interpretation of the law in a particular jurisdiction.
The harshest punishment for a crime is capital punishment also known as the death penalty.
Neither procedural law or substantive law are more important than the other. All crime needs to have a known punishment (substantive) and a proper way to get to that punishment (procedural).
depends where you get punishment from. From home or state law or country?
No, they are protected by law.
she had leprosy
Punishment