Obstacles to Fairness in Criminal Proceedings
Individual Rights and Institutional Forms
Professor Sarah J Summers editor Professor John D Jackson editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:23rd Jul '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The book considers fairness in criminal proceedings, and examines how the current focus on individual rights may constitute an obstacle to ensuring fairness.
This volume considers the way in which the focus on individual rights may constitute an obstacle to ensuring fairness in criminal proceedings. The increasingly cosmopolitan nature of criminal justice, forcing legal systems with different institutional forms and practices to interact with each other as they attempt to combat crime beyond national borders, has accentuated the need for systems to seek legitimacy beyond their domestic traditions. Fairness, expressed in terms of the right to a fair trial in provisions such as Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights, has emerged across Europe as the principal means of guaranteeing the legitimacy of criminal proceedings. The consequence of this is that criminal procedure doctrines are framed overwhelmingly in 'constitutional' terms – the protection of defence rights is necessary to restrict and legitimate the state's mandate to prosecute crime. Yet there are various problems with relying solely or predominantly on defence rights as a means of ensuring that proceedings are 'fair' or legitimate and these issues are rarely discussed in the academic literature. In this volume, scholars from the disciplines of law, philosophy and sociology challenge various normative assumptions underpinning our understanding of fairness in criminal proceedings.
ISBN: 9781509940233
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 544g
344 pages