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Перевод: deterrence speek deterrence


[существительное]
удержание; отпугивание; устрашение
[существительное]


Тезаурус:

  1. In this respect Hirschi shared the long-standing positivist rejection of the central tenet of classicism: deterrence.
  2. Deterrence by tougher penalties is not enough.
  3. Deterrence has developed a language, a range of scholarship, and a political influence considerably in advance of anything achieved in the name of the laws of war.
  4. Sir John suggested that if there was a clash in the allocation of resources between a credible level of nuclear deterrence and the necessary level of conventional forces, he, for one, would support giving priority to the latter.
  5. Back at home the first positive political opposition to the philosophy of nuclear deterrence, upon which the Sandys Reformation depended, began to crystallize with the formation of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
  6. It was noted in Chapter I that attempts in the early nineteenth century to put Beccaria's classical programme into practice encountered severe difficulties: the desire to make punishment solely concerned with effective deterrence, rather than with equating suffering with desert, proved to be unacceptable on the grounds of its retributive injustice.
  7. According to Braithwaite (1981b) there are numerous reasons why smart lawyers are able to accomplish this form of economic deterrence.
  8. And he added, with a simplicity that subsequent proponents of deterrence have learned to avoid: "this means that you have to kill women and children more quickly than the enemy if you want to save yourselves."
  9. But cruise and Pershing 11 missiles do more than maintain deterrence in the face of a growing threat.
  10. Much more difficult is the general fact of rising lawlessness itself, whether violent or non-violent; for, though I feel obliged to consider the death penalty primarily by the test of deterrence, I recognise that the interrelation of crime, punishment and the opinion and behaviour of a society is something far more subtle and profound.
  11. Ironically, it is just at the organizational level that ideas of deterrence, incapacitation, rehabilitation, and restitution to the community and the offended gain this season's attractive fashionable glow.
  12. This raises the question, discussed in the final section, as to whether there may be other respects in which the laws of war might actually be compatible with deterrence in some form.
  13. Among some people who have been involved in negotiations at Geneva on laws-of-war matters there is a genuine concern that any neat set of rules limiting the use of nuclear weapons in one way or another might have the unfortunate effects either of weakening deterrence; or else, contrariwise, of seeming to legitimise such uses of nuclear weapons as are not covered in any agreement; or else of being nothing more than a paper accord, which would be of little real value in a conflict.

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