A critical analysis of the operation of the principle of 'joint enterprise' prosecution in contemporary gang suppression and enforcement strategies, drawing particular attention to the racially discriminatory over-use of JE prosecutions in over-criminalising young black men, notwithstanding recent legal decision
Interviews were undertaken with participants drawn from four groups: police detectives; criminal law...
This paper reports original evidence about the experiences of 109 girls and women criminalised in En...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
<p>Following the collapse of a number of 'gang-related' prosecutions in England and Wales from the l...
Joint enterprise (JE) is an extraordinary legal device deployed to punish and (re)produce those who ...
This paper develops a methodological framework to understand criminal laws as cultural artefacts—as ...
In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessor...
This paper argues that both criminologists and lawyers need a far more philosophically robust accoun...
This article examines the need to reform the UK law of joint enterprise, the scope of which has been...
‘Joint enterprise’ is described as a ‘dragnet’ that draws disproportionate numbers of black and mino...
The doctrine of joint criminal enterprise is in disarray. Despite repeated judicial scrutiny at the ...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE)-a judicially interpreted doctrine\u27- has become a hallmark mode ...
This article dissects the Tadic court’s argument for finding the doctrine of joint criminal enterpri...
This report presents the findings of an exploratory study of joint enterprise, undertaken by the Ins...
Our paper addresses the question of the deterrent effect of a monetary sanction associated to a coll...
Interviews were undertaken with participants drawn from four groups: police detectives; criminal law...
This paper reports original evidence about the experiences of 109 girls and women criminalised in En...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
<p>Following the collapse of a number of 'gang-related' prosecutions in England and Wales from the l...
Joint enterprise (JE) is an extraordinary legal device deployed to punish and (re)produce those who ...
This paper develops a methodological framework to understand criminal laws as cultural artefacts—as ...
In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessor...
This paper argues that both criminologists and lawyers need a far more philosophically robust accoun...
This article examines the need to reform the UK law of joint enterprise, the scope of which has been...
‘Joint enterprise’ is described as a ‘dragnet’ that draws disproportionate numbers of black and mino...
The doctrine of joint criminal enterprise is in disarray. Despite repeated judicial scrutiny at the ...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE)-a judicially interpreted doctrine\u27- has become a hallmark mode ...
This article dissects the Tadic court’s argument for finding the doctrine of joint criminal enterpri...
This report presents the findings of an exploratory study of joint enterprise, undertaken by the Ins...
Our paper addresses the question of the deterrent effect of a monetary sanction associated to a coll...
Interviews were undertaken with participants drawn from four groups: police detectives; criminal law...
This paper reports original evidence about the experiences of 109 girls and women criminalised in En...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...