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Killing in Self-Defence (Hardcover, New)
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Killing in Self-Defence (Hardcover, New)
Series: Oxford Monographs on Criminal Law and Justice
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This book is a comprehensive analysis of the criminal defence of
self-defence from a philosophical, legal and human rights
perspective. The primary focus is on self-defence as a defence to
homicide, as this is the most difficult type of self-defensive
force to justify. Although not always recognised as such,
self-defence is a contentious defence, permitting as it does the
victim of an attack to preserve her life at the expense of another.
If one holds that all human life is of equal value, explaining why
this is permissible poses something of a challenge. It is
particularly difficult to explain where the aggressor is, for
reasons of non-age or insanity for example, not responsible for her
actions. The first part of the book is devoted to identifying the
proper theoretical basis of a claim of self-defence. It examines
the classification of defences, and the concepts of justification
and excuse in particular, and locates self-defence within this
classification. It considers the relationship between self-defence
and the closely related defences of duress and necessity. It then
proceeds critically to analyse various philosophical explanations
of why self-defensive killing is justified, before concluding that
the most convincing account is one that draws on the right to life
with an accompanying theory of forfeiture. The book then proceeds
to draw upon this analysis to examine various aspects of the law of
self-defence. There is detailed analysis of the way in which, on a
human rights approach, it is appropriate to treat the issues of
retreat, imminence of harm, self-generated self-defence, mistake
and proportionality, with a particular focus on whether lethal
force is ever permissible in protecting property or in preventing
rape. The analysis draws on material from all of the major common
law jurisdictions. The book concludes with an examination of the
implications that the European Convention on Human Rights might
have for the law of self-defence, especially in the areas of
mistaken belief and the degree of force permissible to protect
property.
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