The manner in which criminal suspects are brought to trial has changed considerably in the past forty years in the criminal justice processes of both the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. While the ‘normalisation’ of emergency measures has played a considerable role in altering the nature and shape of these processes, other factors have also been influential: for example, rights-protection under the European Convention on Human Rights in both jurisdictions and under the Constitution in the Republic; political reaction to perceived domestic crises; and the emergence of new voices, such as those of victims, within the criminal justice sphere
Employing culture as a lens through which to examine the Irish criminal justice system, this paper...
Restorative justice has developed at a slow but steady pace in the Republic of Ireland...
This country survey examines the core Irish criminal justice institutions; basic trends in crime and...
The manner in which criminal suspects are brought to trial has changed considerably in the past fort...
The colonial origins of the Irish criminal justice system can be seen its buildings, laws, procedure...
As with any country, crime and justice and the contours of criminal justice have to be situated with...
Recent years have seen a re-introduction of the victim of crime into Irish criminal justice. This th...
There has been growing recognition of the interests and needs of victims in the law arena, where pre...
All post-conflict societies switching to constitutional liberal democracies have to deal with their ...
This study was submitted by Amnesty International (AI) to the UK Government in 1982 and then publish...
This thesis explores the manner in which the Irish criminal process addresses the specific needs of ...
peer-reviewedIt is not difficult to find, in Ireland, traces of what David Garland would call the "...
peer-reviewedSummary: Trials have evolved into an adversarial process, and the state has taken over...
Following international trends victims of crime in Ireland have increasingly become a source of poli...
Recourse to forensic capabilities is on an upward trajectory; yet, concurrently, international scand...
Employing culture as a lens through which to examine the Irish criminal justice system, this paper...
Restorative justice has developed at a slow but steady pace in the Republic of Ireland...
This country survey examines the core Irish criminal justice institutions; basic trends in crime and...
The manner in which criminal suspects are brought to trial has changed considerably in the past fort...
The colonial origins of the Irish criminal justice system can be seen its buildings, laws, procedure...
As with any country, crime and justice and the contours of criminal justice have to be situated with...
Recent years have seen a re-introduction of the victim of crime into Irish criminal justice. This th...
There has been growing recognition of the interests and needs of victims in the law arena, where pre...
All post-conflict societies switching to constitutional liberal democracies have to deal with their ...
This study was submitted by Amnesty International (AI) to the UK Government in 1982 and then publish...
This thesis explores the manner in which the Irish criminal process addresses the specific needs of ...
peer-reviewedIt is not difficult to find, in Ireland, traces of what David Garland would call the "...
peer-reviewedSummary: Trials have evolved into an adversarial process, and the state has taken over...
Following international trends victims of crime in Ireland have increasingly become a source of poli...
Recourse to forensic capabilities is on an upward trajectory; yet, concurrently, international scand...
Employing culture as a lens through which to examine the Irish criminal justice system, this paper...
Restorative justice has developed at a slow but steady pace in the Republic of Ireland...
This country survey examines the core Irish criminal justice institutions; basic trends in crime and...