It is submitted in this article that assisting/encouraging is normatively different from and less harmful and dangerous than perpetration, and that the unfairness and injustice of complicity is doubled in the context of extended joint criminal enterprise. The defendant’s participation in the underlying crime is constructed as participation in the collateral crime and such fictitiously constructed participation is further constructed as actus reus of the collateral crime; and the defendant’s foresight of the collateral crime is constructed as intention to assist/encourage the collateral crime and such fictitiously constructed mental state is further constructed as sufficient mens rea for the collateral crime. The double constructive nature o...
In Reinterpreting Criminal Complicity and Inchoate Participation Offences, Dennis J. Baker argues th...
This article dissects the Tadic court’s argument for finding the doctrine of joint criminal enterpri...
In this paper it is argued that the decision in Miller v The Queen [2016] HCA 30 is not supported by...
It is submitted in this article that assisting/encouraging is normatively different from and less ha...
It is submitted in this article that assisting/encouraging is normatively different from and less ha...
This book has examined the English law governing participation in crimes and has built a case for ab...
This article tries to identify the limits of derivative liability and its alternatives. In this arti...
The doctrine of joint criminal enterprise is in disarray. Despite repeated judicial scrutiny at the ...
In this essay I try to ascertain whether there is any normative or doctrinal foundation for the exte...
JCE is a mode of liability that comprises of three categories of case. This thesis focuses on the th...
The following article is an attempt to provide a coherent theory that international tribunals may us...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
This thesis examines whether the doctrine of extended common purpose should be abolished and, if so,...
Joint enterprise principles have extended accomplice liability to establish a form of guilt by assoc...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE) has caused a lot of concern amongst international criminal law pract...
In Reinterpreting Criminal Complicity and Inchoate Participation Offences, Dennis J. Baker argues th...
This article dissects the Tadic court’s argument for finding the doctrine of joint criminal enterpri...
In this paper it is argued that the decision in Miller v The Queen [2016] HCA 30 is not supported by...
It is submitted in this article that assisting/encouraging is normatively different from and less ha...
It is submitted in this article that assisting/encouraging is normatively different from and less ha...
This book has examined the English law governing participation in crimes and has built a case for ab...
This article tries to identify the limits of derivative liability and its alternatives. In this arti...
The doctrine of joint criminal enterprise is in disarray. Despite repeated judicial scrutiny at the ...
In this essay I try to ascertain whether there is any normative or doctrinal foundation for the exte...
JCE is a mode of liability that comprises of three categories of case. This thesis focuses on the th...
The following article is an attempt to provide a coherent theory that international tribunals may us...
This thesis explores the English doctrine of joint criminal enterprise by way of a comparative study...
This thesis examines whether the doctrine of extended common purpose should be abolished and, if so,...
Joint enterprise principles have extended accomplice liability to establish a form of guilt by assoc...
Joint criminal enterprise (JCE) has caused a lot of concern amongst international criminal law pract...
In Reinterpreting Criminal Complicity and Inchoate Participation Offences, Dennis J. Baker argues th...
This article dissects the Tadic court’s argument for finding the doctrine of joint criminal enterpri...
In this paper it is argued that the decision in Miller v The Queen [2016] HCA 30 is not supported by...