Principles of Criminal Law (Paper 1) Flashcards
Principles used to determine what conduct should be criminalised
Harm, Autonomy & Individual Responsibility
Principles used to formulate/create new criminal law
Fair labelling, correspondence, maximum certainty, no retrospective liability
Meaning of harm
Causing harm to others, yourself, property, and even future injury or harm, such as hate speech
Causing harm to yourself will always be criminal. True or false
False, for example suicide is no longer a criminal offence
Meaning of autonomy
The freedom to do whatever a person wants
When will autonomy be limited
To limit harm
Fair labelling meaning
Offences are labelled according to seriousness, and appropriate labels for each offence
Examples of labels
Murderer, thief, robber, killer, attacker etc
Principle that states there must be a link between the actus reus and mens rea
Correspondence
Offence which supports the correspondence principle and why
Theft as there must be a ‘dishonest appropriation’
Examples of offences which don’t support the correspondence principle
Murder, unlawful act manslaughter, ABH, assault, battery, ….
Principle which states the law should be as certain as possible
Maximum certainty
No retrospective liability meaning
Unfair to convict D of an offence if the unlawful conduct is not an offence at the time
Case which did create retrospective liability
R v R