Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study
Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study
Law of Europe > Europe. Comparative and uniform law > Regional comparative and uniform law > Breach of contract > General > General
Edition Details
- Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): Brants, C. H.
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): England
- Publication Information: Oxford ; Portland, Ore. : Hart Pub., 2001
- Type: Book
- Permalink: http://books.lawlegal.eu/personal-autonomy-the-private-sphere-and-the-criminal-law-a-comparative-study/ (Stable identifier)
Additional Format
Online version: Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law. Oxford ; Portland, Ore.: Hart Pub., 2001 (OCoLC)606545744 Online version: Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law. Oxford ; Portland, Ore.: Hart Pub., 2001 (OCoLC)629923462
Short Description
XXV, 274 pages ; 24 cm
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study in Google Books
- Find Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Responsable Person: edited by Peter Alldridge and Chrisje Brants.
- Publication Date: 2001
- Country/State: England
- Number of Editions: 7 editions
- First edition Date: 1999
- Last edition Date: 2001
- Languages: English
- Library of Congress Code: KJC1676
- Dewey Code: 342.4085
- ISBN: 1901362825 9781901362824
- OCLC: 48516014
Main Contents
Introduction / Peter Alldridge and Chrisje Brants
1. Legal Moralism or Paternalism? Tolerance or Indifference? Egalitarian Justice and the Ethics of Equal Concern / Koen Raes
2. Privacy, Autonomy and Criminal Justice Rights: Philosophical Preliminaries / Paul Roberts
3. The Public, the Private and the Significance of Payments / Peter Alldridge
4. Sovereignty, Criminal Law and the New European Context / Leonard F. M. Besselink
5. The State and the Nation's Bedrooms: The Fundamental Right of Sexual Autonomy / Chrisje Brants
6. Human Rights and the Criminalisation of Tradition: The Practices Formerly Known as “Female Circumcision” / Lois Bibbings
7. Denying Shoah / Bert Swart
8. Criminal Legislation in the Nineteenth Century: The Historic Roots of Criminal Law and Non-Intervention in the Netherlands / C. M. Pelser
9. Consent in Dutch Criminal Law / Constantijn Kelk
10. Dangerousness, Popular Knowledge and the Criminal Law: A Case Study of the Paedophile as Sociocultural Phenomenon / Richard Collier
11. The Fight Against Sex with Children / M. Moerings.
Summary Note
This book confronts the increasing range of legal and philosophical issues arising from the relationship between privacy and the criminal law.
Structured Subjects (Headings):
Unstructured Subjects (Headings):
Find it in the Library of Congress:
If you wish to locate similar books to “Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study”, they can be found under the 342.4085 in a public library, and the Library of Congress call numbers starting with KJC1676 in most university libraries. If you wish to look up similar titles to “Personal autonomy, the private sphere, and the criminal law: a comparative study” in an on-line library catalog, the official Library of Congress Subject Headings under which they can be found are:
Criminal law
Europe
Liberty
Privacy, Right of
Privacy, Right of–Europe