tailieunhanh - Answering for Crime Responsibility and Liability in the Criminal Law

‘Wounding with intent’ is a criminal offence in English law: it is committed by someone who causes a wound or grievous bodily harm to another, intending to cause grievous bodily harm or to resist or prevent a lawful arrest;1 but a person who commits that offence can still gain an acquittal by offering a defence—for instance of self-defence or duress. | Legal Theory Today Answering for Crime Legal Theory Today FOUNDING EDITOR John Gardner Professor of Jurisprudence University College Oxford TITLES IN THIS SERIES Law in its Own Right by Henrik Palmer Olsen and Stuart Toddington Law and Aesthetics by Adam Gearey Law as a Social Institution by Hamish Ross Evaluation and Legal Theory by Julie Dickson Risks and Legal Theory by Jenny Steele A Sociology of Jurisprudence Richard Nobles and David Schiff Costs and Cautionary Tales Economic Insights for the Law by Anthony Ogus Legal Norms and Normativity An Essay in Genealogy by Sylvie Delacroix Consent in the Law by Deryck Beyleveld and Roger Brownsword Forthcoming titles Law after Modernity by Sionaidh Douglas-Scott Law and Ethics by John Tasioulas Law and Human Need by John .

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