Sir James Mackintosh as a Reformer in Early Nineteenth Century EnglandUniversity of Wisconsin--Madison, 1939 - 276 pages |
Contents
The Man and His Career | 5 |
The Reform of the Criminal Law | 31 |
The Reform of Parliament | 74 |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abolition abolitionists amendment Anti-Slavery argument Bentham Bombay British Museum Brougham Burke Buxton capital punishment Castlereagh Catholic emancipation cause classes Committee convicts crimes criminal code criminal law death penalty debate early nineteenth century economic Edinburgh Review effect elected English evil executed feelings forgery French Revolution friends George Tierney Grey Hansard Holland House House of Commons House of Lords Ibid India Ireland Josiah Wedgwood justice later Letters Liverpool London Lord Holland Lord John Lord John Russell Mackin Mackintosh spoke Mackintosh's career measure member of Parliament Memoirs ment mitigation moral motion murder NINETEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND offenses opinion Papers Parlia parliamentary reform particularly Peel penal petition philosophy political principles prison proposed prosecuted punishment of death question Radicals reason REFORMER IN EARLY repeal Romilly Russell session Sir James Mackintosh slave trade slavery Society thesis tion Tory tosh Tracts and Speeches universal suffrage Vindiciae Gallicae vote Wedgwood Whigs Wilberforce William wrote