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Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)

Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law By Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)

Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law by Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)


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Summary

This important new work examines fundamental, but hitherto neglected, issues of national criminal law. Where and to whom does that law apply? When can domestic law apply to conduct that takes place abroad? The author examines the territorial and extraterritorial application of the criminal law, identifying defects, lacunae, and historical accidents, and suggests possible reforms.

Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law Summary

Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law by Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)

In the modern world, it is increasingly difficult for criminal law to be applied on a narrow territorial basis. This is especially apparent in the context of international fraud, drug smuggling, internet crime, and international terrorism. Against that background, this important new work examines some fundamental, but hitherto neglected, issues of domestic criminal law. Where, and to whom, does that law apply? When, in particular, can national law properly concern itself with conduct that takes place wholly or partly abroad? Should it primarily be concerned with delinquent conduct, or with the consequences of that conduct, which may take effect in a different part of the world? On what basis can a person who is not a UK national be regarded as offending against the law if he is not within the territories governed by that law? What is the position under international law? And how are the precise boundaries (especially the adjacent maritime boundaries) of a nation's criminal law defined? The author examines the territorial and extraterritorial application of the criminal law, identifying many defects, lacunae and historical accidents; and considers possible ways in which some at least of the problems that beset these areas of law might be alleviated.

Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law Reviews

Michael Hirst deserves the warmest congratulations for a work of first-rate scholarship written in admirably uncluttered language. Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law is concise and commanding in its exposition, trustworthy in its analysis, and astoundingly thorough. It provides a wealth of information both useful and, at times, exquisitely arcane, and its salutary emphasis on ambit as a substantive issue, an element of the actus reus, is alone enough to make it worth the money. * Roger O'Keefe, Criminal Law Review *

About Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)

Michael Hirst is Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester

Table of Contents

Preface ; Tables ; 1. Ambit and Jurisdiction in English Criminal Law ; 2. Historical, International, and Other Influences ; 3. The Limits of Territorial Jurisdiction ; 4. Cross-frontier Offences ; 5. The Extraterritorial Application of English Criminal Law ; 6. Maritime and Aviation Offences ; 7. Rethinking the Ambit of the Criminal Law ; Select Bibliography ; Index

Additional information

NPB9780199245390
9780199245390
0199245398
Jurisdiction and the Ambit of the Criminal Law by Michael Hirst (Professor of Criminal Justice, De Montfort University, Leicester)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
2003-07-31
350
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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