The combined decisions of the UK Supreme Court and Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in R v. Jogee; Ruddock v. The Queen caused upheaval in the English law on criminal complicity. The Supreme Court/Privy Council decided that the law on criminal complicity „took a wrong turn” 33 years ago in the Privy Council ruling in Chan Wing-Siu which concerned a controversial doctrine of parasitic joint enterprise liability. According to the said doctrine, if A and B set out to commit a crime X (e.g. robbery) and B foresees that A might commit crime Y (e.g. murder) in the course of committing crime X, B will be liable for crime Y, even if he does not intend that crime Y be committed. The mere fact of foresight on B’s part is enough for him to be c...
The Supreme Court’s judgment in Jogee and Ruddock v The Queen1 substantially altered the criminal la...
When crimes are being organized, there are often more than one person involved in the planning, sett...
This article explores the evolution of secondary liability and the unforgiving doctrine of joint ent...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
In R v Jogee, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom (UKSC) abolished a contentious doctrine of cri...
Criminal cases, being almost entirely domestic in their nature, rarely draw comparative attention. B...
For more than thirty years the English law established that whenever two defendants had a common int...
In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessor...
The aim of this essay is to show that the judges siting in the majority in Miller v The Queen1 (here...
The UK Supreme Court in R v Jogee [2016] considered the doctrine of joint enterprise, in particular ...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE) has caused a lot of concern amongst international criminal law pract...
In R v Jogee, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom (UKSC) abolished a contentious doctrine of cri...
Sir Richard Buxton is right that Jogee; Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681 (h...
The work considers the construction of homicide liability where two or more parties participate in a...
This study deals with the law of criminal complicity in both its commonlaw dimensions and as modifie...
The Supreme Court’s judgment in Jogee and Ruddock v The Queen1 substantially altered the criminal la...
When crimes are being organized, there are often more than one person involved in the planning, sett...
This article explores the evolution of secondary liability and the unforgiving doctrine of joint ent...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
In R v Jogee, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom (UKSC) abolished a contentious doctrine of cri...
Criminal cases, being almost entirely domestic in their nature, rarely draw comparative attention. B...
For more than thirty years the English law established that whenever two defendants had a common int...
In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessor...
The aim of this essay is to show that the judges siting in the majority in Miller v The Queen1 (here...
The UK Supreme Court in R v Jogee [2016] considered the doctrine of joint enterprise, in particular ...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE) has caused a lot of concern amongst international criminal law pract...
In R v Jogee, the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom (UKSC) abolished a contentious doctrine of cri...
Sir Richard Buxton is right that Jogee; Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681 (h...
The work considers the construction of homicide liability where two or more parties participate in a...
This study deals with the law of criminal complicity in both its commonlaw dimensions and as modifie...
The Supreme Court’s judgment in Jogee and Ruddock v The Queen1 substantially altered the criminal la...
When crimes are being organized, there are often more than one person involved in the planning, sett...
This article explores the evolution of secondary liability and the unforgiving doctrine of joint ent...