The Routledge International Handbook of Criminal Responsibility (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Crofts, Thomas; Loughnan, Arlie; Kennefick, Louise
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The Routledge International Handbook of Criminal Responsibility (eBook, ePUB)
Redaktion: Crofts, Thomas; Loughnan, Arlie; Kennefick, Louise
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Presenting cutting edge research and scholarship, this extensive volume covers everything from abstract theorising about the meanings of responsibility and how we blame, to analysing criminal law and justice responses, and factors that impact individual responsibility.
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Presenting cutting edge research and scholarship, this extensive volume covers everything from abstract theorising about the meanings of responsibility and how we blame, to analysing criminal law and justice responses, and factors that impact individual responsibility.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040229095
- Artikelnr.: 72296459
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Dezember 2024
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781040229095
- Artikelnr.: 72296459
Thomas Crofts is a Professor in the School of Law and in the Department of Social and Behavioural Sciences at City University Hong Kong, and an Adjunct Professor at Northumbria University, Queensland University of Technology, and the University of Sydney. His research in comparative criminal law and criminal justice focuses on criminalisation and criminal responsibility, particularly in relation to young people, gender, and sexuality. Louise Kennefick is Senior Lecturer in Criminal Law at the University of Glasgow. She researches across the fields of criminal law theory and criminal justice. Her monograph, The Boundaries of Blame: Towards a Universal Partial Defence for the Criminal Law, is forthcoming. Arlie Loughnan is Professor of Criminal Law and Criminal Law Theory at the University of Sydney. Her interests range across criminal law, legal theory, and legal history. She is the author of Self, Others and the State: Relations of Criminal Responsibility (2020) and Manifest Madness: Mental Incapacity in Criminal Law (2012).
PART I: FOUNDATIONS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 1. Cultures of
Responsibility and Blaming 2. Context Matters: An Argument for a
Socio-Contextual Model of Criminal Responsibility 3. The Reciprocity of
Criminal Responsibility 4. Criminal Responsibility, Civilisation, and
Empire 5. Criminal Responsibility Attribution as a Step on the Road to
Desistance? Exploring Theoretical Intersections 6. Responsibility and
"Blameworthiness" in Criminal Law 7. Criminal Responsibility, Mental
Disorder, and Behavioural Neuroscience 8. Criminal Responsibility in the
Italian Colonies: The Eritrean Case (Nineteenth-Twentieth Centuries) 9. On
Dispositional-Relational Responsibility: From Punishment to Reconciliation
10. From Casuistry to the General Part: The Conception of Criminal
Responsibility from the ius commune to the Penal Codes (Twelfth-Nineteenth
Centuries)
PART II: DOCTRINES AND PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 11. Law,
Emotions, and "Reactive Defences" 12. Recklessness and Negligence in the
Criminal Law 13. The Denial/Defence and Offence/Defence Distinction:
Rehabilitating Gardner to Answer the Incorporationist Challenge 14. The
Criminal Law of Triage: A Rights-Based Approach to Justificatory Defences
15. Responsibility over Crime and Tort 16. Criminal Responsibility for
Market Misconduct 17. Elements of Blameworthiness in the Law of Homicide:
Harmfulness, Wrongness, and Culpability 18. Criminal Insanity and Mental
Disorder: Reconsidering the Relation 19. Comparing Criminal and Civil
Responsibility: Contextualising Claims to Distinctiveness 20. Criminal
Responsibility under Changing Knowledge Conditions 21. Forms of Duress as
Defence and Mitigation
PART III: DOMAINS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 22. Corporate Accountability
for International Crimes: Towards an International Enforcement Mechanism
23. Disclosure of Childhood Criminal Records in England and Wales: Imposing
Enduring Criminal Responsibility for Childhood Behaviours 24. Stuck in
Time: The Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility in England and Wales 25.
Corporate Criminal Ir/responsibility 26. Rethinking the Age of Criminal
Responsibility 27. Neurotechnology and the Insanity Defence 28. Criminal
Capacity and the Age of Criminal Responsibility: Dissecting the Assumptions
Underlying a Single Chronological Age 29. Organisational Culture, Industry
Norms, and Corporate Wrongdoing: A New Integrated Theory of Crime
Prevention 30. Ecocide, Ecojustice, and Criminal Responsibility in
International Law 31. Criminal Responsibility in Children
Responsibility and Blaming 2. Context Matters: An Argument for a
Socio-Contextual Model of Criminal Responsibility 3. The Reciprocity of
Criminal Responsibility 4. Criminal Responsibility, Civilisation, and
Empire 5. Criminal Responsibility Attribution as a Step on the Road to
Desistance? Exploring Theoretical Intersections 6. Responsibility and
"Blameworthiness" in Criminal Law 7. Criminal Responsibility, Mental
Disorder, and Behavioural Neuroscience 8. Criminal Responsibility in the
Italian Colonies: The Eritrean Case (Nineteenth-Twentieth Centuries) 9. On
Dispositional-Relational Responsibility: From Punishment to Reconciliation
10. From Casuistry to the General Part: The Conception of Criminal
Responsibility from the ius commune to the Penal Codes (Twelfth-Nineteenth
Centuries)
PART II: DOCTRINES AND PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 11. Law,
Emotions, and "Reactive Defences" 12. Recklessness and Negligence in the
Criminal Law 13. The Denial/Defence and Offence/Defence Distinction:
Rehabilitating Gardner to Answer the Incorporationist Challenge 14. The
Criminal Law of Triage: A Rights-Based Approach to Justificatory Defences
15. Responsibility over Crime and Tort 16. Criminal Responsibility for
Market Misconduct 17. Elements of Blameworthiness in the Law of Homicide:
Harmfulness, Wrongness, and Culpability 18. Criminal Insanity and Mental
Disorder: Reconsidering the Relation 19. Comparing Criminal and Civil
Responsibility: Contextualising Claims to Distinctiveness 20. Criminal
Responsibility under Changing Knowledge Conditions 21. Forms of Duress as
Defence and Mitigation
PART III: DOMAINS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 22. Corporate Accountability
for International Crimes: Towards an International Enforcement Mechanism
23. Disclosure of Childhood Criminal Records in England and Wales: Imposing
Enduring Criminal Responsibility for Childhood Behaviours 24. Stuck in
Time: The Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility in England and Wales 25.
Corporate Criminal Ir/responsibility 26. Rethinking the Age of Criminal
Responsibility 27. Neurotechnology and the Insanity Defence 28. Criminal
Capacity and the Age of Criminal Responsibility: Dissecting the Assumptions
Underlying a Single Chronological Age 29. Organisational Culture, Industry
Norms, and Corporate Wrongdoing: A New Integrated Theory of Crime
Prevention 30. Ecocide, Ecojustice, and Criminal Responsibility in
International Law 31. Criminal Responsibility in Children
PART I: FOUNDATIONS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 1. Cultures of
Responsibility and Blaming 2. Context Matters: An Argument for a
Socio-Contextual Model of Criminal Responsibility 3. The Reciprocity of
Criminal Responsibility 4. Criminal Responsibility, Civilisation, and
Empire 5. Criminal Responsibility Attribution as a Step on the Road to
Desistance? Exploring Theoretical Intersections 6. Responsibility and
"Blameworthiness" in Criminal Law 7. Criminal Responsibility, Mental
Disorder, and Behavioural Neuroscience 8. Criminal Responsibility in the
Italian Colonies: The Eritrean Case (Nineteenth-Twentieth Centuries) 9. On
Dispositional-Relational Responsibility: From Punishment to Reconciliation
10. From Casuistry to the General Part: The Conception of Criminal
Responsibility from the ius commune to the Penal Codes (Twelfth-Nineteenth
Centuries)
PART II: DOCTRINES AND PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 11. Law,
Emotions, and "Reactive Defences" 12. Recklessness and Negligence in the
Criminal Law 13. The Denial/Defence and Offence/Defence Distinction:
Rehabilitating Gardner to Answer the Incorporationist Challenge 14. The
Criminal Law of Triage: A Rights-Based Approach to Justificatory Defences
15. Responsibility over Crime and Tort 16. Criminal Responsibility for
Market Misconduct 17. Elements of Blameworthiness in the Law of Homicide:
Harmfulness, Wrongness, and Culpability 18. Criminal Insanity and Mental
Disorder: Reconsidering the Relation 19. Comparing Criminal and Civil
Responsibility: Contextualising Claims to Distinctiveness 20. Criminal
Responsibility under Changing Knowledge Conditions 21. Forms of Duress as
Defence and Mitigation
PART III: DOMAINS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 22. Corporate Accountability
for International Crimes: Towards an International Enforcement Mechanism
23. Disclosure of Childhood Criminal Records in England and Wales: Imposing
Enduring Criminal Responsibility for Childhood Behaviours 24. Stuck in
Time: The Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility in England and Wales 25.
Corporate Criminal Ir/responsibility 26. Rethinking the Age of Criminal
Responsibility 27. Neurotechnology and the Insanity Defence 28. Criminal
Capacity and the Age of Criminal Responsibility: Dissecting the Assumptions
Underlying a Single Chronological Age 29. Organisational Culture, Industry
Norms, and Corporate Wrongdoing: A New Integrated Theory of Crime
Prevention 30. Ecocide, Ecojustice, and Criminal Responsibility in
International Law 31. Criminal Responsibility in Children
Responsibility and Blaming 2. Context Matters: An Argument for a
Socio-Contextual Model of Criminal Responsibility 3. The Reciprocity of
Criminal Responsibility 4. Criminal Responsibility, Civilisation, and
Empire 5. Criminal Responsibility Attribution as a Step on the Road to
Desistance? Exploring Theoretical Intersections 6. Responsibility and
"Blameworthiness" in Criminal Law 7. Criminal Responsibility, Mental
Disorder, and Behavioural Neuroscience 8. Criminal Responsibility in the
Italian Colonies: The Eritrean Case (Nineteenth-Twentieth Centuries) 9. On
Dispositional-Relational Responsibility: From Punishment to Reconciliation
10. From Casuistry to the General Part: The Conception of Criminal
Responsibility from the ius commune to the Penal Codes (Twelfth-Nineteenth
Centuries)
PART II: DOCTRINES AND PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 11. Law,
Emotions, and "Reactive Defences" 12. Recklessness and Negligence in the
Criminal Law 13. The Denial/Defence and Offence/Defence Distinction:
Rehabilitating Gardner to Answer the Incorporationist Challenge 14. The
Criminal Law of Triage: A Rights-Based Approach to Justificatory Defences
15. Responsibility over Crime and Tort 16. Criminal Responsibility for
Market Misconduct 17. Elements of Blameworthiness in the Law of Homicide:
Harmfulness, Wrongness, and Culpability 18. Criminal Insanity and Mental
Disorder: Reconsidering the Relation 19. Comparing Criminal and Civil
Responsibility: Contextualising Claims to Distinctiveness 20. Criminal
Responsibility under Changing Knowledge Conditions 21. Forms of Duress as
Defence and Mitigation
PART III: DOMAINS OF CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY 22. Corporate Accountability
for International Crimes: Towards an International Enforcement Mechanism
23. Disclosure of Childhood Criminal Records in England and Wales: Imposing
Enduring Criminal Responsibility for Childhood Behaviours 24. Stuck in
Time: The Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility in England and Wales 25.
Corporate Criminal Ir/responsibility 26. Rethinking the Age of Criminal
Responsibility 27. Neurotechnology and the Insanity Defence 28. Criminal
Capacity and the Age of Criminal Responsibility: Dissecting the Assumptions
Underlying a Single Chronological Age 29. Organisational Culture, Industry
Norms, and Corporate Wrongdoing: A New Integrated Theory of Crime
Prevention 30. Ecocide, Ecojustice, and Criminal Responsibility in
International Law 31. Criminal Responsibility in Children