Principles of Criminal Law (Paper 1) Flashcards

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1
Q

Principles used to determine what conduct should be criminalised

A

Harm, Autonomy & Individual Responsibility

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2
Q

Principles used to formulate/create new criminal law

A

Fair labelling, correspondence, maximum certainty, no retrospective liability

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3
Q

Meaning of harm

A

Causing harm to others, yourself, property, and even future injury or harm, such as hate speech

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4
Q

Causing harm to yourself will always be criminal. True or false

A

False, for example suicide is no longer a criminal offence

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5
Q

Meaning of autonomy

A

The freedom to do whatever a person wants

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6
Q

When will autonomy be limited

A

To limit harm

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7
Q

Fair labelling meaning

A

Offences are labelled according to seriousness, and appropriate labels for each offence

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8
Q

Examples of labels

A

Murderer, thief, robber, killer, attacker etc

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9
Q

Principle that states there must be a link between the actus reus and mens rea

A

Correspondence

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10
Q

Offence which supports the correspondence principle and why

A

Theft as there must be a ‘dishonest appropriation’

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11
Q

Examples of offences which don’t support the correspondence principle

A

Murder, unlawful act manslaughter, ABH, assault, battery, ….

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12
Q

Principle which states the law should be as certain as possible

A

Maximum certainty

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13
Q

No retrospective liability meaning

A

Unfair to convict D of an offence if the unlawful conduct is not an offence at the time

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14
Q

Case which did create retrospective liability

A

R v R

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