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The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Process

Online ISBN:
9780190659875
Print ISBN:
9780190659837
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Criminal Process

Darryl K. Brown (ed.),
Darryl K. Brown
(ed.)
Law, University of Virginia
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Darryl K. Brown is the O. M. Vicars Professor of Law and Barron F. Black Research Professor of Law at the University of Virginia School of Law.

Jenia Iontcheva Turner (ed.),
Jenia Iontcheva Turner
(ed.)
School of Law, Southern Methodist University
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Jenia Iontcheva Turner is the Amy Abboud Ware Centennial Professor in Criminal Law at SMU Dedman School of Law.

Bettina Weisser (ed.)
Bettina Weisser
(ed.)
Criminal Law, University of Cologne
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Professor of Criminal Law, Director of the Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, University of Cologne

Published online:
11 February 2019
Published in print:
14 April 2019
Online ISBN:
9780190659875
Print ISBN:
9780190659837
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This handbook examines various aspects of the criminal process, including the role of prosecutors in common law and civil law jurisdictions, the rights and duties of experts, victim rights in civil law jurisdictions, surveillance and investigation, criminal prosecution and its alternatives, evidence discovery and disclosure in common law systems, evidence law as forensic science, common law plea bargaining, appeals and post-conviction review, and procedure in international tribunals. The book is organized into eight parts covering topics ranging from criminal process in the dual penal state to interrogation law and practice in common law jurisdictions, empirical and comparative approaches to criminal procedure, prosecution-led investigations and measures of procedural coercion in the field of corruption, international corporate prosecutions, special procedures for white-collar and corporate wrongdoing in Europe, and trial procedure in response to terrorism. Also discussed are the roles of the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights as guardians of fair criminal proceedings in Europe, double jeopardy or ne bis in idem in common law and civil law jurisdictions, plea bargaining vs. abbreviated trial procedures, restorative justice as an alternative to penal sanctions, and the pluralistic nature of international criminal procedure.

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