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9780191801945

Making the Modern Criminal Law Civil Order and Criminalization

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780191801945

  • ISBN10:

    0191801941

  • Format: eBook
  • Copyright: 2016-03-07
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary

The Criminalization series arose from an interdisciplinary investigation into criminalization, focussing on the principles that might guide decisions about what kinds of conduct should be criminalized, and the forms that criminalization should take. Developing a normative theory of criminalization, the series tackles the key questions at the heart of the issue: what principles and goals should guide legislators in deciding what to criminalize? How should criminal wrongs be classified and differentiated? How should law enforcement officials apply the law's specifications of offences?

The fifth book in the series offers an historical and conceptual account of the criminal law, as it has developed in England and spread to common law jurisdictions around the world. It traces how and why criminal law has come to be accorded with a central role in securing civil order in modernity, and justifies who and what should be treated as criminal under the law. Farmer argues that the emergence of the modern state in which criminal law is recognized as an instrument of government is a result of the distinct body of rules which have emerged from the modern criminal law.

Structured in two parts, the first traces the development of the modern criminal law, including jurisdiction, codification, and responsibility. The second part engages in a detailed analysis of the development of specific categories of criminal law, focusing on patterns of criminalization in relation to property offences, offences against the person, sexual offences, and civility.

Author Biography


Lindsay Farmer, Professor of Law, University of Glasgow

Lindsay Farmer is Professor of Law at the University of Glasgow. He is the author of Criminal Law, Tradition and Legal Order (Cambridge, 1997) and The Trial on Trial III: Towards a Normative Theory of the Criminal Trial (Hart, 2007), as well as a co-editor of the Criminalization series (OUP). He has published widely on different aspects of criminal law and legal theory, and is co-author of the popular jurisprudence textbook, Jurisprudence: Themes and Concepts (2nd edn., Routledge, 2012)

Table of Contents


Introduction
Part II: Criminal Law as an Institution
1. The Institution of Criminal Law
2. Securing Civil Order
Part II: General
3. Making Criminal Law
4. Jurisdiction
5. Codification
6. Responsibility
Part III: Special
7. Property
8. Person
9. Sex
10. Speech
Part IV: Conclusion
11. Speech and Civil Order: Rethinking Criminalization

Supplemental Materials

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