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Accessorial liability after Jogee / edited by Beatrice Krebs.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford : Hart, 2020Distributor: [London, England] : Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020Description: 1 online resource : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781509918911
  • 9781509918904
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Accessorial liability after JogeeDDC classification:
  • 345.4203 23
LOC classification:
  • KD7910 .A334 2020eb
Online resources: Also published in print.
Contents:
Law Reform in the Supreme Court : The Abolition of Joint Enterprise Liability? / G.R. Sullivan -- What is the Theoretical Basis for Accomplice Liability? / Rebecca Williams -- Jogee, Parasitic Accessory Liability and Conditional Intention / Christopher Cowley -- A Step Away from Liability : Withdrawal and Fundamental Difference Post-Jogee / Catarina Sjölin -- Vulnerability Theory and Joint Enterprise / Jon Herring -- Joint Enterprise Murder is Dead : Long Live Joint Enterprise Manslaughter? / Beatrice Krebs -- The Queen v C, D and E : In the Supreme Court of Ruritania, 9 June 2017 / Matt Dyson -- Thinking Like an Accomplice : The Mens Rea for Complicity in US and English Law after Rosemond and Jogee / Vanessa Reid, Alexander Sarch and Sophie Walker -- Joint Criminal Confusion : Exploring the Merits and Demerits of Joint Enterprise Liability / Elies van Sliedregt -- Extended Joint Criminal Enterprise : 'Top-down' or 'Bottom-up' Legal Reasoning? / Mark Weinberg -- Jogee : How Did it Happen? / Felicity Gerry.
Summary: "In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessorial liability when it handed down its decision in R v Jogee. The Court abolished the head of liability known as 'joint criminal enterprise' and replaced it with the ordinary principles of aiding and abetting, which it re-stated for this purpose. But the full implications of the case for the criminal law remain at present uncertain, underexplored and divisive. This book examines Jogee in detail, bringing together legal academics and barristers, all of them experts in the area of complicity, but each of whom have different experiences and views to bear on the issues under debate. The result is the first comprehensive analysis of the various issues that arise from Jogee. It is not just meant to provide a source of reference for academics and practitioners working in the area of complicity, its aim is more ambitious in that it seeks to chart the way forward and to suggest solutions to the various problems created by Jogee for criminal law theory and practice"-- Provided by publisher.
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"This edited collection resulted from a two-day workshop, kindly funded by the BA/Leverhulme Small Grants scheme, that was held at the University of Reading" -- ECIP introduction, page 1.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Law Reform in the Supreme Court : The Abolition of Joint Enterprise Liability? / G.R. Sullivan -- What is the Theoretical Basis for Accomplice Liability? / Rebecca Williams -- Jogee, Parasitic Accessory Liability and Conditional Intention / Christopher Cowley -- A Step Away from Liability : Withdrawal and Fundamental Difference Post-Jogee / Catarina Sjölin -- Vulnerability Theory and Joint Enterprise / Jon Herring -- Joint Enterprise Murder is Dead : Long Live Joint Enterprise Manslaughter? / Beatrice Krebs -- The Queen v C, D and E : In the Supreme Court of Ruritania, 9 June 2017 / Matt Dyson -- Thinking Like an Accomplice : The Mens Rea for Complicity in US and English Law after Rosemond and Jogee / Vanessa Reid, Alexander Sarch and Sophie Walker -- Joint Criminal Confusion : Exploring the Merits and Demerits of Joint Enterprise Liability / Elies van Sliedregt -- Extended Joint Criminal Enterprise : 'Top-down' or 'Bottom-up' Legal Reasoning? / Mark Weinberg -- Jogee : How Did it Happen? / Felicity Gerry.

Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to individual document purchasers.

"In February 2016, the UK Supreme Court fundamentally changed the criminal law principles of accessorial liability when it handed down its decision in R v Jogee. The Court abolished the head of liability known as 'joint criminal enterprise' and replaced it with the ordinary principles of aiding and abetting, which it re-stated for this purpose. But the full implications of the case for the criminal law remain at present uncertain, underexplored and divisive. This book examines Jogee in detail, bringing together legal academics and barristers, all of them experts in the area of complicity, but each of whom have different experiences and views to bear on the issues under debate. The result is the first comprehensive analysis of the various issues that arise from Jogee. It is not just meant to provide a source of reference for academics and practitioners working in the area of complicity, its aim is more ambitious in that it seeks to chart the way forward and to suggest solutions to the various problems created by Jogee for criminal law theory and practice"-- Provided by publisher.

Also published in print.

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Mode of access: World Wide Web.

Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

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