Reconstructing Criminal Law: Text and Materials

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 2003 - Law - 912 pages
Reconstructing Criminal Law provides a radical and stimulating alternative to the standard black letter criminal law text. The authors analyse central aspects of criminal law in the context of the assumptions surrounding it, and employ a number of critical approaches, including a feminist perspective to give insights into the current state of the law. A comprehensive resource - it contains extracts that cover a wide range of materials from historical, political, sociological and philosophical sources and discusses offences considered to be at the margins of criminal law. It also offers an important practical element whereby students and teachers can attempt to answer the questions that the criminal justice system confronts on a daily basis.

From inside the book

Contents

Approaching criminal law
1
in search of the golden thread
23
b Mens rea
49
C
60
f Vicarious liability
67
Defining crimes
78
Law and order
111
Further reading
136
Property and propriety
310
Property rights and criminal enforcement
424
trust
454
Sexual violence
473
Regulating sexuality
516
Regulating maternity
579
conceptions of violence
625
The criminal regulation of public safety
637

Breach of the peace
162
Fixed penalty notices onthespot fines
168
i
180
Trying disorder
186
Risk and danger
216
Further reading
242
legal constructions of a social problem
271
Medical nontreatment
683
Who can be killed?
705
Further reading
712
Bibliography
805
Index
847
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information