|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Today, EU criminal law and justice constitutes a significant body
of law potentially affecting most aspects of criminal justice. This
book provides a comprehensive, accessible yet analytically
challenging account of the institutional and legal developments in
this field to date. It also includes full consideration of the
prospective changes to EU criminal law contained in the recent
'Lisbon Treaty'. While, broadly speaking, the authors welcome the
objectives of EU criminal law, they call for a profound rethinking
of how the good of criminal justice - however defined - is to be
delivered to those living in the EU. At present, despite sometimes
commendable initiatives from the institutions responsible, the
actual framing and implementation of the Area of Freedom, Security
and Justice (AFSJ) suffers from a failure to properly consider the
theoretical implications of providing the good of criminal justice
at the EU level. Written shortly before the recent entry into force
of the Lisbon Treaty, EU Criminal Law and Justice comprises a full
overview of the key legal developments and debates and includes a
user-friendly guide to the institutional changes contained in the
Treaty. This timely book will be of interest to both undergraduate
and postgraduate students, as well as to legal practitioners and
policy makers at national and EU levels.
Today, EU criminal law and justice constitutes a significant body
of law potentially affecting most aspects of criminal justice. This
book provides a comprehensive, accessible yet analytically
challenging account of the institutional and legal developments in
this field to date. It also includes full consideration of the
prospective changes to EU criminal law contained in the recent
'Lisbon Treaty'. While, broadly speaking, the authors welcome the
objectives of EU criminal law, they call for a profound rethinking
of how the good of criminal justice - however defined - is to be
delivered to those living in the EU. At present, despite sometimes
commendable initiatives from the institutions responsible, the
actual framing and implementation of the Area of Freedom, Security
and Justice (AFSJ) suffers from a failure to properly consider the
theoretical implications of providing the good of criminal justice
at the EU level. Written shortly before the recent entry into force
of the Lisbon Treaty, EU Criminal Law and Justice comprises a full
overview of the key legal developments and debates and includes a
user-friendly guide to the institutional changes contained in the
Treaty. This timely book will be of interest to both undergraduate
and postgraduate students, as well as to legal practitioners and
policy makers at national and EU levels.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R318
Discovery Miles 3 180
|