Courts and commentators commonly claim that criminal law contains a voluntary act requirement. Despite the ubiquity of this assertion, there is remarkably little agreement on what the voluntary act requirement entails. This lack of uniformity is particularly problematic because, for some crimes, whether a defendant is guilty or innocent will turn on which conception of voluntariness is applied. In this Article, we critique the various conceptions of the voluntary act requirement, and propose an alternative set of principles for applying the notion that person is only criminally culpable for crimes committed voluntarily. First, culpability requires that the actus reus as a whole (rather than merely one element of the actus reus) be voluntary...
It is widely accepted that accomplices to crime are to be judged and punished as if they had actuall...
This article examines the legal implications linked to recent scientific research on human conscious...
grantor: University of TorontoHow and where we ought to draw the distinction between volun...
Courts and commentators commonly claim that criminal law contains a voluntary act requirement. Despi...
This paper offers a critical reconsideration of the traditional doctrine that responsibility for a c...
Committing physical behavior is a prerequisite in realization of criminal liability in criminal law....
American law requires a voluntary act or omission before assigning criminal liability. The law also ...
The article examines the criterion of voluntariness of the institution of “czynny żal” (active regr...
The Voluntary Act Requirement (“VAR”) is the fundamental predicate for imposing legal punishment. Pu...
It is a fundamental principle of Anglo-American criminal law that an offender must have performed th...
The modern criminal law is based upon four key principles: the principle of legality, necessity of c...
Serbian Criminal Code (CC) provides in art. 32 that offender who voluntary withdraws from an attempt...
In addition to requiring subjective culpability, criminal offenses typically involve two objective f...
Confession law is in a state of collapse. Fifty years ago, three different doctrines imposed constit...
Criminal law has developed to prohibit new forms of intrusion on the autonomy and mental processes o...
It is widely accepted that accomplices to crime are to be judged and punished as if they had actuall...
This article examines the legal implications linked to recent scientific research on human conscious...
grantor: University of TorontoHow and where we ought to draw the distinction between volun...
Courts and commentators commonly claim that criminal law contains a voluntary act requirement. Despi...
This paper offers a critical reconsideration of the traditional doctrine that responsibility for a c...
Committing physical behavior is a prerequisite in realization of criminal liability in criminal law....
American law requires a voluntary act or omission before assigning criminal liability. The law also ...
The article examines the criterion of voluntariness of the institution of “czynny żal” (active regr...
The Voluntary Act Requirement (“VAR”) is the fundamental predicate for imposing legal punishment. Pu...
It is a fundamental principle of Anglo-American criminal law that an offender must have performed th...
The modern criminal law is based upon four key principles: the principle of legality, necessity of c...
Serbian Criminal Code (CC) provides in art. 32 that offender who voluntary withdraws from an attempt...
In addition to requiring subjective culpability, criminal offenses typically involve two objective f...
Confession law is in a state of collapse. Fifty years ago, three different doctrines imposed constit...
Criminal law has developed to prohibit new forms of intrusion on the autonomy and mental processes o...
It is widely accepted that accomplices to crime are to be judged and punished as if they had actuall...
This article examines the legal implications linked to recent scientific research on human conscious...
grantor: University of TorontoHow and where we ought to draw the distinction between volun...