Until recently, English law was distinctive because it provided for the police, rather than public prosecutors, to prosecute the accused. The 1986 creation of the Crown Prosecution Service changed the old system which had evolved over two centuries. Here, Hay and Snyder show how that old system emerged, and explore its place in state power, class relations, and constitutional theory. They examine the origins of police prosecutorial power, its social significance and features, and its evolution in comparison with policing in Scotland and Ireland.https://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/faculty_books/1064/thumbnail.jp
The extent and import of changes in contemporary crime control are hotly contested. By setting these...
In Policing the City, Harris seeks to explain the transformation of criminal justice, particularly ...
Although Crown Office is central to the Scottish criminal justice system there has been little moder...
Until recently, English law was distinctive because it provided for the police, rather than public p...
An overview of the development of private prosecution into police prosecution in England 1750-1850, ...
By the middle of the nineteenth century, professional policing of a recognizably modern character wa...
Historians of English criminal justice administration have long asserted that criminal prosecution i...
Abstract Can the market provide law enforcement? This paper addresses this question by analyzing an ...
Crime, Policing and Punishment in England, 1660-1914 offers an overview of the changing nature of cr...
The law of Scotland has barely recognised the existence of private prosecutors and the preferred pol...
However fundamental he may appear to us, the public prosecutor was an historical latecomer. Judge an...
This study presents an innovative analysis of the policing of petty offending and the work the polic...
This study examines the development of policing in Glasgow from 1779 to 1846. It argues that while p...
Histories of policing in Britain suggest that over time the institutional agencies responsible for e...
This article argues that research into preventive and pre-emptive crime control in the United Kingdo...
The extent and import of changes in contemporary crime control are hotly contested. By setting these...
In Policing the City, Harris seeks to explain the transformation of criminal justice, particularly ...
Although Crown Office is central to the Scottish criminal justice system there has been little moder...
Until recently, English law was distinctive because it provided for the police, rather than public p...
An overview of the development of private prosecution into police prosecution in England 1750-1850, ...
By the middle of the nineteenth century, professional policing of a recognizably modern character wa...
Historians of English criminal justice administration have long asserted that criminal prosecution i...
Abstract Can the market provide law enforcement? This paper addresses this question by analyzing an ...
Crime, Policing and Punishment in England, 1660-1914 offers an overview of the changing nature of cr...
The law of Scotland has barely recognised the existence of private prosecutors and the preferred pol...
However fundamental he may appear to us, the public prosecutor was an historical latecomer. Judge an...
This study presents an innovative analysis of the policing of petty offending and the work the polic...
This study examines the development of policing in Glasgow from 1779 to 1846. It argues that while p...
Histories of policing in Britain suggest that over time the institutional agencies responsible for e...
This article argues that research into preventive and pre-emptive crime control in the United Kingdo...
The extent and import of changes in contemporary crime control are hotly contested. By setting these...
In Policing the City, Harris seeks to explain the transformation of criminal justice, particularly ...
Although Crown Office is central to the Scottish criminal justice system there has been little moder...