The Plymouth Law & Criminal Justice Review: Recent submissions
Now showing items 41-50 of 137
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The Animals Act 1971 Places a Disproportionate Burden on the Keepers of Animals and is in Need of Reform
(University of Plymouth, 2016)The purpose of this paper is to determine whether the Animals Act 1971 places a disproportionate burden on the keepers of animals and whether it is in need of reform. The law prior to the Act will be considered in order ... -
LASPO: Balancing Access to Justice with Legal Austerity in Private Family Law
(University of Plymouth, 2016) -
The Duchy of Cornwall and the Principle of Crown Immunity, Part II: Is the Duchy Free to Break the Law without Criminal Sanction?
(University of Plymouth, 2016) -
Consent, Knowledge and Precaution: A Critical Analysis of the Criminalisation of the Reckless Transmission of HIV and Other Serious Diseases
(University of Plymouth, 2017)This article examines the criminalisation of the reckless transmission of disease in England and Wales. The defence of consent to bodily harm and the principle of informed consent are crucial to the foundations of this ... -
The Seigniory of Sark and the Duchy Of Cornwall: Similarities and Differences Including Observations on the Isles of Scilly
(University of Plymouth, 2017) -
Slavery, Dark Tourism and Deviant Leisure at the American Society of Criminology in New Orleans
(University of Plymouth, 2017) -
Criminal Law in the 21st Century
(University of Plymouth, 2017) -
Despite Efforts, International Environmental Law is Aspirational Rather than Successful in its Contribution to the Protection of the Global Environment and in the Fight Against Climate Change
(University of Plymouth, 2017)The 1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment2 (Stockholm Conference) was the first of many international negotiations to consider the effects of anthropogenic interference with the environment, including ... -
Alleviating the ‘Miserable Condition’: Fitzjames Stephen and the Development of Modern Abortion Law
(University of Plymouth, 2016)Contemporary English abortion law is now typically thought to be a development of the twentieth century, and little academic attention has been paid to its development before the 1938 case of R v Bourne or the Abortion ...