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The Limits of Criminal Law (student edition) - Anglo-German Concepts and Principles (Paperback): Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel The Limits of Criminal Law (student edition) - Anglo-German Concepts and Principles (Paperback)
Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel; Contributions by Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel, Grant Lamond, …
R3,312 Discovery Miles 33 120 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Limits of Criminal Law shines light from the outer edges of the criminal law in to better understand its core. From a framework of core principles, different borders are explored to test out where criminal law's normative or performative limits are, in particular, the borders of crime with tort, non-criminal enforcement, medical law, business regulation, administrative sanctions, counter-terrorism and intelligence law.The volume carefully juxtaposes and compares English and German law on each of these borders, drawing out underlying concepts and key comparative lessons. Each country offers insights beyond their own laws. This double perspective sharpens readers critical understanding of the criminal law, and at the same time produces insights that go beyond the perspective of one legal tradition.The book does not promote a single normative view of the limits of criminal law, but builds a detailed picture of the limits that exist now and why they exist now. This evidence-led approach is particularly important in an ever more interconnected world in which different perceptions of criminal law can lead to profound misunderstandings between countries. The Limits of Criminal Law builds picture of what shapes the criminal law, where those limits come from, and what might motivate legal systems to strain, ignore or strengthen those limits. Some of the most interesting insights come out of the comparison between German systematic approach and doctrinal limits with English laws focus on process and judgment on individual questions.

The Limits of Criminal Law - Anglo-German Concepts and Principles (Hardcover): Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel The Limits of Criminal Law - Anglo-German Concepts and Principles (Hardcover)
Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel; Contributions by Matthew Dyson, Benjamin Vogel, Grant Lamond, …
R3,328 Discovery Miles 33 280 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Limits of Criminal Law shines light from the outer edges of the criminal law in to better understand its core. From a framework of core principles, different borders are explored to test out where criminal law's normative or performative limits are, in particular, the borders of crime with tort, non-criminal enforcement, medical law, business regulation, administrative sanctions, counter-terrorism and intelligence law.The volume carefully juxtaposes and compares English and German law on each of these borders, drawing out underlying concepts and key comparative lessons. Each country offers insights beyond their own laws. This double perspective sharpens readers' critical understanding of the criminal law, and at the same time produces insights that go beyond the perspective of one legal tradition.The book does not promote a single normative view of the limits of criminal law, but builds a detailed picture of the limits that exist now and why they exist now. This evidence-led approach is particularly important in an ever more interconnected world in which different perceptions of criminal law can lead to profound misunderstandings between countries. The Limits of Criminal Law builds picture of what shapes the criminal law, where those limits come from, and what might motivate legal systems to strain, ignore or strengthen those limits. Some of the most interesting insights come out of the comparison between German systematic approach and doctrinal limits with English law's focus on process and judgment on individual questions.

Explaining Tort and Crime - Legal Development Across Laws and Legal Systems, 1850-2020 (Hardcover): Matthew Dyson Explaining Tort and Crime - Legal Development Across Laws and Legal Systems, 1850-2020 (Hardcover)
Matthew Dyson
R2,921 Discovery Miles 29 210 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Tracing almost 200 years of history, Explaining Tort and Crime explains the development of tort law and criminal law in England compared with other legal systems. Referencing legal systems from around the globe, it uses innovative comparative and historical methods to identify patterns of legal development, to investigate the English law of fault doctrine across tort and crime, and to chart and explain three procedural interfaces: criminal powers to compensate, timing rules to control parallel actions, and convictions as evidence in later civil cases. Matthew Dyson draws on decades of research to offer an analysis of the field, examining patterns of legal development, visible as motifs in the law of many legal systems.

Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law (Paperback, 32nd Revised edition): Matthew Dyson Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law (Paperback, 32nd Revised edition)
Matthew Dyson
R550 Discovery Miles 5 500 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Reading and interpreting primary legislation is an essential part of any law degree. Get a head start, and add depth to your understanding by using Blackstone's Statutes as a reference material throughout your course. Celebrating over 30 years as the market-leading series, Blackstone's Statutes have an unrivalled tradition of trust and quality. Our expert editors have carefully selected material to help you direct your study and gain an overview of the subject area. Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law is edited and designed to help you succeed in your legal studies. Blackstone's Statutes on Criminal Law is: • First choice: most trusted and most popular • Easy to use: find what you need instantly • Lecturer reviewed: the best match for your course • Most comprehensive: everything you need for study and assessments • Unrivalled in reputation: expertly edited Digital formats and resources This edition is available for students and institutions to purchase in a variety of formats, and is supported by online resources. The e-book offers a mobile experience and convenient access along with functionality tools, navigation features, and links that offer extra learning support: www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/ebooks The online resources include video guides to reading and interpreting statutes, web links, exam tips, and an interactive sample Act of Parliament.

Fifty Years of the Law Commissions - The Dynamics of Law Reform (Paperback): Matthew Dyson, James Lee, Shona Wilson Stark Fifty Years of the Law Commissions - The Dynamics of Law Reform (Paperback)
Matthew Dyson, James Lee, Shona Wilson Stark
R2,941 Discovery Miles 29 410 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This book brings together past and present law commissioners, judges, practitioners, academics and law reformers to analyse the past, present and future of the Law Commissions in the United Kingdom and beyond. Its internationally recognised authors bring a wealth of experience and insight into how and why law reform does and should take place, covering statutory and non-statutory reform from national and international perspectives. The chapters of the book developed from papers given at a conference to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Law Commissions Act 1965.

Comparing Tort and Crime - Learning from across and within Legal Systems (Hardcover): Matthew Dyson Comparing Tort and Crime - Learning from across and within Legal Systems (Hardcover)
Matthew Dyson
R4,658 Discovery Miles 46 580 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The fields of tort and crime have much in common in practice, particularly in how they both try to respond to wrongs and regulate future behaviour. Despite this commonality in fact, fascinating difficulties have hitherto not been resolved about how legal systems co-ordinate (or leave wild) the border between tort and crime. What is the purpose of tort law and criminal law, and how do you tell the difference between them? Do criminal lawyers and civil lawyers reason and argue in the same way? Are the rules on capacity, consent, fault, causation, secondary liability or defences the same in tort as in crime? How do the rules of procedure operate for each area? Are there points of overlap? When, how and why do tort and crime interact? This volume systematically answers these and other questions for eight legal systems: England, France, Germany, Sweden, Spain, Scotland, the Netherlands and Australia.

Unravelling Tort and Crime (Hardcover): Matthew Dyson Unravelling Tort and Crime (Hardcover)
Matthew Dyson
R4,140 Discovery Miles 41 400 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Tort law and criminal law are closely bound together but their relationship rarely receives sustained and rigorous scrutiny. This is the first significant project in England and Wales to address that shortcoming. Building on growing interest amongst both academics and practitioners in the relationship between tort and crime, it draws together leading experts to chart the field and explore key points of interest. It uses a range of perspectives from legal theory, doctrine, legal history and comparative law to address some of the most important and interesting links between tort and crime. Examples include how the illegality defence operates to avoid stultification of the law, the difference between criminal and civil causation, how the Motor Insurers' Bureau not only insures but acts to enforce laws and alter behaviour, and why civil law only very rarely restores specific property but the criminal law does it daily.

Law and Legal Process - Substantive Law and Procedure in English Legal History (Hardcover, New): Matthew Dyson, David Ibbetson Law and Legal Process - Substantive Law and Procedure in English Legal History (Hardcover, New)
Matthew Dyson, David Ibbetson
R2,723 Discovery Miles 27 230 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This collection of papers from the Twentieth British Legal History Conference explores the relationship between substantive law and the way in which it actually worked. Instead of looking at what the courts said they were doing, it is concerned more with the reality of what was happening. To that end, the authors use a wide range of sources, from court records to merchants' diaries and lawyers' letters. The way in which the sources are used reflects the possibilities of legal historical research which are opening up in the twenty-first century, as large databases and digitised images - and even online auction sites - make it a practical possibility to do work at a level which was almost unthinkable only a short time ago.

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