Peace bonds are a legal tool of governance dating back to 13th c. England. In Canada, a significant change in the application of peace bonds took place in the mid-1990s, shifting their purpose from governing minor disputes between individuals to allowing for persons who have not been charged with a crime to be governed as if they had. Given the legal test for a peace bond has always been the determination of ‘reasonable fear’, the advent of these ‘specialized’ peace bonds suggests that the object of reasonable fear has changed. Despite their lengthy history, peace bonds have limited coverage in academic literature, a weakness compounded by a predominant doctrinal approach based in a liberal framework. The central inquiry of this thesis ...
This thesis examines in detail the provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 which allow for the ...
Within criminology and criminal law the reception of post-9/11 counter-terrorist law has generally b...
Abstract: Truces among violent criminal organizations, like gangs and organized crime syndicates, wh...
Guided by Ericson\u27s counter-law analytic, the focus of this thesis is how peace bonds erode tradi...
In previous research, core peacemaking criminology themes addressed by authors within the Pepinsky a...
The `fear of crime' has, in the past three decades or so, developed as an important area of criminol...
Based on a nationwide random sample survey, the relationship among fear of crime, fear of the police...
Implicit in the concept of negotiated orders is an understanding of the social productivity of polit...
In this comment I wish to examine some of the legal and practical problems with peace bond proceed...
The peacemaking perspective in criminology claims that in order to solve crime both an individual an...
This thesis is a critical approach to the concept of fear of crime. It is not necessarily a call for...
This thesis is concerned with the Menzies Government and ASIO's responses to the threat posed by the...
The fear of crime has been recognized as an important social problem in its own right, with a signif...
Within criminology and criminal law the reception of post-9/11 counter-terrorist law has generally b...
Purpose: This paper examines whether the concept of risk in legal responses of Western liberal demo...
This thesis examines in detail the provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 which allow for the ...
Within criminology and criminal law the reception of post-9/11 counter-terrorist law has generally b...
Abstract: Truces among violent criminal organizations, like gangs and organized crime syndicates, wh...
Guided by Ericson\u27s counter-law analytic, the focus of this thesis is how peace bonds erode tradi...
In previous research, core peacemaking criminology themes addressed by authors within the Pepinsky a...
The `fear of crime' has, in the past three decades or so, developed as an important area of criminol...
Based on a nationwide random sample survey, the relationship among fear of crime, fear of the police...
Implicit in the concept of negotiated orders is an understanding of the social productivity of polit...
In this comment I wish to examine some of the legal and practical problems with peace bond proceed...
The peacemaking perspective in criminology claims that in order to solve crime both an individual an...
This thesis is a critical approach to the concept of fear of crime. It is not necessarily a call for...
This thesis is concerned with the Menzies Government and ASIO's responses to the threat posed by the...
The fear of crime has been recognized as an important social problem in its own right, with a signif...
Within criminology and criminal law the reception of post-9/11 counter-terrorist law has generally b...
Purpose: This paper examines whether the concept of risk in legal responses of Western liberal demo...
This thesis examines in detail the provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 1991 which allow for the ...
Within criminology and criminal law the reception of post-9/11 counter-terrorist law has generally b...
Abstract: Truces among violent criminal organizations, like gangs and organized crime syndicates, wh...