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  1.  50
    The lore of criminal accusation.George Pavlich - 2007 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (1):79-97.
    In crime-obsessed cultures, the rudimentary trajectories of criminalizing processes are often overlooked. Specifically, processes of accusation that arrest everyday life, and enable possible enunciations of a criminal identity, seldom attract sustained attention. In efforts at redress, this paper considers discursive reference points through which contextually credible accusations of ‘crime’ are mounted. Focusing particularly on the ethical dimensions of what might be considered a ‘lore’ (rather than law) of criminal accusation, it examines several ways that exemplary cases reflect paradigms of accusatorial (...)
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  2.  74
    After sovereignty: on the question of political beginnings.Charles Barbour & George Pavlich (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    Addressing the three dominant contemporary attitudes towards sovereignty - Sovereignty Renewed; Sovereignty Rethought; Sovereignty Rejected - After Sovereignty ...
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  3.  34
    Responding to my interlocutors: a subject in the making..George Pavlich - 2007 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (1):115-117.
    In this response to Ronnie Lippens’ and Erik Claes’ critiques of a paper entitled ‘The Lore of Criminal accusation,’ Pavlich notes the ways in which his work might be compared to, yet differentiated from, abolitionist approaches to crime. Working through Lippens’ comments, he notes a possible way to understand the analysis and politics of crime (through accusation). Pavlich challenges Claes’ optimistic hypostatization of ‘criminal law’, idiosyncratic understandings of deconstruction and refocuses attention on the centrality of accusation to creating criminal subjects.
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  4.  25
    Cape Legal Idioms and the Colonial Sovereign.George Pavlich - 2013 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 26 (1):39-54.
    A crucial element of sovereignty politics concerns the role that juridical techniques play in recursively creating images of the sovereign. This paper aims to render that dimension explicit by focusing on examples of crime-focused law and colonial rule at the Cape of Good Hope circa 1795. It attempts to show how this law helped to define a colonial sovereign via such idioms as proclamations, inquisitorial criminal procedures, and case narratives framing the atrocity and appropriate punishment for crimes. Referring to primary (...)
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  5. Ethics, universal principles and restorative justice.George Pavlich - 2007 - In Gerry Johnstone & Daniel W. van Ness (eds.), Handbook of Restorative Justice.
     
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  6.  27
    Sovereignty by acquisition at the Cape: Foucault, Hobbes and de Mist.George Pavlich - 2012 - In Ben Golder (ed.), Re-reading foucault: on law, power and rights. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 107.
  7.  35
    Jennifer L. Culbert: Dead Certainty: The Death Penalty and the Problem of Judgment: Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008, 235 pp. [REVIEW]George Pavlich - 2009 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 22 (1):157-161.