Criminal Law and the Authority of the State
Antje du Bois-Pedain editor Professor Magnus Ulväng editor Professor Petter Asp editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:19th Sep '19
Currently unavailable, currently targeted to be due back around 10th May 2025, but could change

An original theoretical study of the state's authority to make criminal law, eminating from the prestigious Centrefor Penal Theory and Penal Ethics at the University of Cambridge.
How does the state, as a public authority, relate to those under its jurisdiction through the criminal law? Connecting the ways in which criminal lawyers, legal theorists, public lawyers and criminologists address questions of the criminal law’s legitimacy, contributors to this collection explore issues such as criminal law-making and jurisdiction; the political-ethical underpinnings of legitimate criminal law enforcement; the offence of treason; the importance of doctrinal guidance in the application of criminal law; the interface between tort and crime; and the purposes and mechanisms of state punishment. Overall, the collection aims to enhance and deepen our understanding of criminal law by conceiving of the practices of criminal justice as explicitly and distinctly embedded in the project of liberal self-governance.
ISBN: 9781509932139
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 376g
264 pages