Over nearly five centuries the UK Parliament, and its earlier incarnations, frequently legislated to ensure the regulation and punishment of buggery, a form of sexual conduct once generally accepted to constitute one of the most serious criminal offences known to law. In the early twenty-first century, Parliament abolished the offence of buggery and, subsequently, granted pardons to certain individuals previously convicted of it. Whilst some aspects of the history of Parliament’s approach to buggery are well known – particularly in respect of homosexual law reform – much of this history remains obscure. This article provides an in-depth consideration of the making of statute law in Parliament relating to buggery that reveals the dramaticall...
This article argues that research into preventive and pre-emptive crime control in the United Kingdo...
This article looks at the number of convictions for a group of offences categorised as obscenity-rel...
As the clock ticked over from 30 April to 1 May 2004 the Sexual Offences Act 20031 came into force a...
Over nearly five centuries the UK Parliament, and its earlier incarnations, frequently legislated to...
The injustices created by the historical criminalisation of consensual same-sex sexual acts between ...
International audienceFor almost 450 years, between the passing of the Buggery Act 1533 and the Sexu...
The Wolfenden Committee was appointed in 1954 by the Churchill government to respond to public deman...
The Sexual Offences Act 1967 made the first inroads to decriminalising men's homosexual sex since bu...
The common law offence of conspiracy to corrupt public morals has a long though controversial histor...
With the recent increase in the number of 'memorial laws' being enacted in response to specific case...
"Throughout the nineteenth century and twentieth century, various attempts were made to define and c...
This article explores the history of vagrancy laws in England, the British Empire, and the British c...
Historically legal writers were among the few who had licence or cause to discourse on sodomy and ot...
When the ‘Turing Bill’ – which would have granted pardons to people with historical convictions for ...
In this article, the author interrogates the construction of gay male sexuality in legal and popular...
This article argues that research into preventive and pre-emptive crime control in the United Kingdo...
This article looks at the number of convictions for a group of offences categorised as obscenity-rel...
As the clock ticked over from 30 April to 1 May 2004 the Sexual Offences Act 20031 came into force a...
Over nearly five centuries the UK Parliament, and its earlier incarnations, frequently legislated to...
The injustices created by the historical criminalisation of consensual same-sex sexual acts between ...
International audienceFor almost 450 years, between the passing of the Buggery Act 1533 and the Sexu...
The Wolfenden Committee was appointed in 1954 by the Churchill government to respond to public deman...
The Sexual Offences Act 1967 made the first inroads to decriminalising men's homosexual sex since bu...
The common law offence of conspiracy to corrupt public morals has a long though controversial histor...
With the recent increase in the number of 'memorial laws' being enacted in response to specific case...
"Throughout the nineteenth century and twentieth century, various attempts were made to define and c...
This article explores the history of vagrancy laws in England, the British Empire, and the British c...
Historically legal writers were among the few who had licence or cause to discourse on sodomy and ot...
When the ‘Turing Bill’ – which would have granted pardons to people with historical convictions for ...
In this article, the author interrogates the construction of gay male sexuality in legal and popular...
This article argues that research into preventive and pre-emptive crime control in the United Kingdo...
This article looks at the number of convictions for a group of offences categorised as obscenity-rel...
As the clock ticked over from 30 April to 1 May 2004 the Sexual Offences Act 20031 came into force a...