This paper attempts to analyse the extent to which elements of the criminal law admit uniform definition across offences, and the implications of that question. That debate contributes to recent scholarship on the scope, purpose and content of the general part. I argue that there are elements which can be defined uniformly, elements which cannot be defined uniformly and elements which, although they are subject to variation depending on offence context, ought to be considered in general by the courts. The considerations that are important in thinking about uniformity are outlined in each of these cases. This has implications for the way in which we think about the general part. Generality is a question of both degree and kind. Consequently,...
The topic of the paper is the conceptual aggregation of criminal offences separation from collision ...
Illegal evidence term in the criminal proceedings arises many theoretical deliberations and disputes...
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil o...
The principle of subsidiarity of criminal law requires the location of the norms which regulate spec...
A synopsis of the criminal law as decided by our appellate courts consists, in the main, of a restat...
In recent years, a number of key terms of the criminal law have seemed to defy definition. Scepticis...
What distinguishes “criminal law” from all other law? This question should be central to both crimin...
There is something about the criminal law that invites comparative analysis. The interests it protec...
This book presents a study on general and specific problems concerning the role, functions and struc...
This chapter describes the basic organising distinctions of current law. The most basic of this orga...
In the United States today criminal justice can vary from state to state, as various states alter th...
The criminal law of England and Wales, as with other jurisdictions, is made up of many thousands of ...
‘Fair labelling’ has become common currency in criminal law scholarship over recent decades, but the...
General principles of law are a primary mechanism for “gap-filling” in international criminal law. H...
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil o...
The topic of the paper is the conceptual aggregation of criminal offences separation from collision ...
Illegal evidence term in the criminal proceedings arises many theoretical deliberations and disputes...
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil o...
The principle of subsidiarity of criminal law requires the location of the norms which regulate spec...
A synopsis of the criminal law as decided by our appellate courts consists, in the main, of a restat...
In recent years, a number of key terms of the criminal law have seemed to defy definition. Scepticis...
What distinguishes “criminal law” from all other law? This question should be central to both crimin...
There is something about the criminal law that invites comparative analysis. The interests it protec...
This book presents a study on general and specific problems concerning the role, functions and struc...
This chapter describes the basic organising distinctions of current law. The most basic of this orga...
In the United States today criminal justice can vary from state to state, as various states alter th...
The criminal law of England and Wales, as with other jurisdictions, is made up of many thousands of ...
‘Fair labelling’ has become common currency in criminal law scholarship over recent decades, but the...
General principles of law are a primary mechanism for “gap-filling” in international criminal law. H...
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil o...
The topic of the paper is the conceptual aggregation of criminal offences separation from collision ...
Illegal evidence term in the criminal proceedings arises many theoretical deliberations and disputes...
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil o...