Description

Book Synopsis
In the past decades, the process of European integration has influenced all fields of law, and eventually also criminal law. Whereas the creation and enforcement of criminal liability used to be purely a national matter, European legislation now requires Member States to criminalize all sorts of harmful conduct. However, this legislation does not determine the full scope of criminal liability, omitting to define general principles of criminal law. For example, the Union refers to 'intention' in its legislation, but it has not deter-mined what qualifies as such. As a result, what is criminal in one State may not be in another, which runs counter to the goal of harmonization. This book aims to remedy this by establishing what mens rea and defences should look like in European criminal law. Should intentional conduct also encompass those consequences that were not wanted, but merely foreseen as possible side-effects? Should the European legislator be allowed to criminalize conduct that does not require any proof of mens rea? What justifications and excuses could a defendant raise in Court? Can torture or murder ever be excused? To answer these questions, this book infers common principles of mens rea and defences from European law and the legal systems of the Member States. Subsequently, it merges them into one coherent and enforceable system.

Trade Review
'...this study performs a great service to scholars of comparative criminal law. Mens rea brings to life current academic discussions across the three national jurisdictions in what is arguably becoming the legal lingua franca in the European Union (if not yet Luxembourg): English. This makes scholarship in Dutch and German accessible to the linguistically challenged, without at the same time obscuring linguistic issues typical to EU law. The work offers a structured approach to subjective elements which can form the basis of analysis in a comprehensive study of all EU criminal jurisdictions, or in international comparisons.' Samuli Miettinen in Juridiska Foreningens Tidskrift (2013) 69

Mens Rea and Defences in European Criminal Law

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    A Paperback / softback by Jeroen Blomsma

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      View other formats and editions of Mens Rea and Defences in European Criminal Law by Jeroen Blomsma

      Publisher: Intersentia Ltd
      Publication Date: 12/10/2012
      ISBN13: 9781780681047, 978-1780681047
      ISBN10: 1780681046

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In the past decades, the process of European integration has influenced all fields of law, and eventually also criminal law. Whereas the creation and enforcement of criminal liability used to be purely a national matter, European legislation now requires Member States to criminalize all sorts of harmful conduct. However, this legislation does not determine the full scope of criminal liability, omitting to define general principles of criminal law. For example, the Union refers to 'intention' in its legislation, but it has not deter-mined what qualifies as such. As a result, what is criminal in one State may not be in another, which runs counter to the goal of harmonization. This book aims to remedy this by establishing what mens rea and defences should look like in European criminal law. Should intentional conduct also encompass those consequences that were not wanted, but merely foreseen as possible side-effects? Should the European legislator be allowed to criminalize conduct that does not require any proof of mens rea? What justifications and excuses could a defendant raise in Court? Can torture or murder ever be excused? To answer these questions, this book infers common principles of mens rea and defences from European law and the legal systems of the Member States. Subsequently, it merges them into one coherent and enforceable system.

      Trade Review
      '...this study performs a great service to scholars of comparative criminal law. Mens rea brings to life current academic discussions across the three national jurisdictions in what is arguably becoming the legal lingua franca in the European Union (if not yet Luxembourg): English. This makes scholarship in Dutch and German accessible to the linguistically challenged, without at the same time obscuring linguistic issues typical to EU law. The work offers a structured approach to subjective elements which can form the basis of analysis in a comprehensive study of all EU criminal jurisdictions, or in international comparisons.' Samuli Miettinen in Juridiska Foreningens Tidskrift (2013) 69

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