Concerns about the lack of integrity in the criminal process, and resulting miscarriages of justice, dented public confidence in the New Zealand justice system and its limited post-conviction review procedures. In turn, this generated an appetite for a Criminal Cases Review Commission, modelled on the English and Scottish Commissions. This article draws on evidence from the English Commission to consider the prospects for the New Zealand Commission given its proposed investigative powers, its criteria for referring cases to the appeal court and its remit beyond casework. It argues that while it is assumed that the New Zealand Commission will have more liberal powers to refer cases back to the appeal court than its sister Commission in Engla...
This paper is a critique of New Zealand’s criminal justice system as it existed in the 1970s. Throug...
Restorative justice has played a paradoxical role in the New Zealand criminal justice system. One th...
Pilot projects in one metropolitan area suggest that reparation schemes, tried successfully in the U...
This thesis sets out to provide a deep analysis of the mechanisms for review of convictions in New Z...
This article concerns the little-known and rarely-exercised power of the Criminal Cases Review Commi...
In New Zealand, the recent history of the jury has been one of fairly steady decline. This is partic...
Since 1997, the Criminal Cases Review Commission of England, Wales and Northern Ireland has served a...
Criminal Justice in New Zealand is the first comprehensive account of the New Zealand approach to cr...
This book reveals what happens to applications for post-conviction review when those in England and ...
This essay evaluates whether private prosecutions remain a safe and useful mechanism in the modern N...
Part I of this Article traces the history of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) a...
The 2017 New Zealand Supreme Court decision in Osborne v Worksafe New Zealand illustrates that there...
This thesis was an investigation into the consequences of the Supreme Court Act 2003. The main purpo...
An overview of the work of the UK's Criminal Cases Review Commission by Professor Graham Zellick (Ch...
The courts have used the concepts of justiciability and intensity of review to restrict access to ju...
This paper is a critique of New Zealand’s criminal justice system as it existed in the 1970s. Throug...
Restorative justice has played a paradoxical role in the New Zealand criminal justice system. One th...
Pilot projects in one metropolitan area suggest that reparation schemes, tried successfully in the U...
This thesis sets out to provide a deep analysis of the mechanisms for review of convictions in New Z...
This article concerns the little-known and rarely-exercised power of the Criminal Cases Review Commi...
In New Zealand, the recent history of the jury has been one of fairly steady decline. This is partic...
Since 1997, the Criminal Cases Review Commission of England, Wales and Northern Ireland has served a...
Criminal Justice in New Zealand is the first comprehensive account of the New Zealand approach to cr...
This book reveals what happens to applications for post-conviction review when those in England and ...
This essay evaluates whether private prosecutions remain a safe and useful mechanism in the modern N...
Part I of this Article traces the history of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) a...
The 2017 New Zealand Supreme Court decision in Osborne v Worksafe New Zealand illustrates that there...
This thesis was an investigation into the consequences of the Supreme Court Act 2003. The main purpo...
An overview of the work of the UK's Criminal Cases Review Commission by Professor Graham Zellick (Ch...
The courts have used the concepts of justiciability and intensity of review to restrict access to ju...
This paper is a critique of New Zealand’s criminal justice system as it existed in the 1970s. Throug...
Restorative justice has played a paradoxical role in the New Zealand criminal justice system. One th...
Pilot projects in one metropolitan area suggest that reparation schemes, tried successfully in the U...