Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth
Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth
Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland > England and Wales > General works
Edition Details
- Creators or Attribution (Responsibility): Ashworth, Andrew , Lucia Zedner, Julian V. Roberts
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): England
- Publication Information: Oxford, U.K. : Oxford University Press, ©2012
- Material: Internet resource
- Type: Book, Internet Resource
- Other titles: Essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth
Essays in honor of Andrew Ashworth - Permalink: https://books.lawi.org.uk/principles-and-values-in-criminal-law-and-criminal-justice-essays-in-honour-of-andrew-ashworth/ (Stable identifier)
Short Description
XXX, 333 pages ; 24 cm
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth in Google Books
- Find Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Responsable Person: edited by Lucia Zedner and Julian V. Roberts.
- Publication Date: 2012
- Copyright Date: 2012
- Location: Oxford, U.K.
- Country/State: England
- Number of Editions: 14 editions
- First edition Date: 2012
- Last edition Date: 2012
- Languages: British English
- Library of Congress Code: KD7850
- Dewey Code: 345
- ISBN: 9780199696796 0199696799
- OCLC: 792885850
Main Contents
Ashworth on principles / John Gardner
Principles, policies, and politics of criminal law / Nicola Lacey
Criminal attempt, the rule of law, and accountability in criminal law / Jeremy Horder
Presuming innocence / R.A. Duff
Fair labelling and social solidarity / Victor Tadros
Distraction and negligence / Douglas Husak
On justifications and excuses / Andrew Simester
Years of provocation, followed by a loss of control / Barry Mitchell
Positive obligations and criminal justice : duties to protect or coerce? / Liora Lazarus
Exploring entrapment / Mike Redmayne
Excluding evidence as protecting constitutional or human rights? / Paul Roberts
Community sanctions and European human rights law / Dirk van Zyl Smit
A system of international criminal justice for human rights VIolations : what is the general justification for its existence? / Andreas von Hirsch and Vivian Schorscher
Equality before the law and equal impact of sanctions : doing justice to differences in wealth and employment status / Kate Warner
Sentencing women : towards gender equality / Elaine Player
Proportionate sentencing and the rule of law / Malcolm Thorburn
Concurrent and consecutive sentences revisited / Martin Wasik
‘Wrongful’ acquittals and ‘unduly lenient’ sentences : misconceived problems that provoke unjust solutions / Michael Tonry.
Table of Contents
See table of contents in PDF. click Here
Structured Subjects (Headings):
- Criminal justice, Administration of
- Criminal law
- Criminal law–Philosophy
- Great Britain
- Human rights
- Punishment
Unstructured Subjects (Headings):
Find it in the Library of Congress:
If you wish to locate similar books to “Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth”, they can be found under the 345 in a public library, and the Library of Congress call numbers starting with KD7850 in most university libraries. If you wish to look up similar titles to “Principles and values in criminal law and criminal justice: essays in honour of Andrew Ashworth” in an on-line library catalog, the official Library of Congress Subject Headings under which they can be found are:
Criminal justice, Administration of
Criminal law
Criminal law–Philosophy
Great Britain
Human rights
Punishment
Leave a Reply