Introduction
Part One: Homicide law Reform and Law Reformers: The English
Experience
1: Safe in Whose Hands? Judges, Experts, and Public Opinion in the
Homicide Reform Process
2: The Rise of Regulation and the Fate of the Common Law
Part Two: Homicide Offences: Disputing the Boundaries
3: On Being Morally and Legally Speaking, a 'Murderer'
4: Corporate Manslaughter and Public Authorities
5: Violating Physical Integrity: Manslaughter by Intentional
Attack
6: Joint Criminal Ventures and Murder
7: Transferred Malice and the Remoteness of Outcomes from
Intentions
Part Three: Defences to Murder
8: Wrong Turnings on Defences to Murder
Bibliography
Jeremy Horder is Edmund-Davies Professor of Criminal Law at King's College London, and a door tenant at 25 Bedford Row. He is an Honorary Bencher of the Middle Temple, and an Emeritus Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford. He was a Law Commissioner for England and Wales from 2005-2010. His previous books with OUP include Provocation and Responsibility (1992) and Excusing Crime (2004).
`Copiously footnoted, the book has extensive tables of cases and
legislation, a useful index and a massive bibliography of almost
twelve pages. What a find for those doing detailed research on this
subject.'
Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green
Chambers
`[A] fascinating monograph that challenges many received ideas and
tendencies, and puts forward a nuanced view of the forces that
should ideally operate to shape the law of homicide.'
Andrew Ashworth (from the preface)
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