A great many people share the sentiment that it is a serious wrong to behave with gross disrespect towards deceased bodies. It may therefore come as a surprise to learn that, currently, English and Welsh criminal law is incapable of dealing with cases of corpse desecration. Drawing upon provisions found in other jurisdictions, I argue that this legal gap ought to be filled by a new criminal offence. This should turn on the objective wrong of disrespect to the corpse as an important symbol of a once‐living person. This framing is important in order to correctly identify what it is that makes desecration rightly criminal, assign accurate labels and to avoid unwarranted over‐criminalisation. I conclude by suggesting that only when such an offe...
Domestic criminal lawyers have become accustomed to the often slow pace of reform in their disciplin...
This book is a multidisciplinary work that investigates the notion of posthumous harm over time. The...
This article critically reviews the present condition of burial law. Situating burial within the wid...
Recent high-profile convictions have called attention to the common law offence of preventing a lawf...
The paper argues that grave re-use cannot be ethically evaluated simply by adverting to cognate issu...
Cult of the dead, their various last resting-places and ceremonies connected with burials or cremat...
Violation of sepulchres is a common law crime in Scotland. This crime ensures that interred human co...
The crime of manslaughter, in England and Wales, arguably includes two ways by which it may be prove...
The laws surrounding involuntary manslaughter construct a confused picture of accountability to poss...
In the later eighteenth century, two schemes were introduced in Parliament for extending the practic...
Violation of sepulchres is a common law crime in Scotland. This crime ensures that interred human co...
This book is a multidisciplinary work that investigates the notion of posthumous harm over time. The...
The well-known saying ‘The dead do tell no tales’ probably received one of its earliest airings in t...
The history and functioning of the common law crimes of violating a grave and violating a dead body ...
The authors describe 3 cases of dismemberment. Numerous methods of hiding a body and thus erasing pr...
Domestic criminal lawyers have become accustomed to the often slow pace of reform in their disciplin...
This book is a multidisciplinary work that investigates the notion of posthumous harm over time. The...
This article critically reviews the present condition of burial law. Situating burial within the wid...
Recent high-profile convictions have called attention to the common law offence of preventing a lawf...
The paper argues that grave re-use cannot be ethically evaluated simply by adverting to cognate issu...
Cult of the dead, their various last resting-places and ceremonies connected with burials or cremat...
Violation of sepulchres is a common law crime in Scotland. This crime ensures that interred human co...
The crime of manslaughter, in England and Wales, arguably includes two ways by which it may be prove...
The laws surrounding involuntary manslaughter construct a confused picture of accountability to poss...
In the later eighteenth century, two schemes were introduced in Parliament for extending the practic...
Violation of sepulchres is a common law crime in Scotland. This crime ensures that interred human co...
This book is a multidisciplinary work that investigates the notion of posthumous harm over time. The...
The well-known saying ‘The dead do tell no tales’ probably received one of its earliest airings in t...
The history and functioning of the common law crimes of violating a grave and violating a dead body ...
The authors describe 3 cases of dismemberment. Numerous methods of hiding a body and thus erasing pr...
Domestic criminal lawyers have become accustomed to the often slow pace of reform in their disciplin...
This book is a multidisciplinary work that investigates the notion of posthumous harm over time. The...
This article critically reviews the present condition of burial law. Situating burial within the wid...