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Blackstone's Guide to the Criminal Justice Act 2003
Richard Taylor, Martin Wasik, and Roger Leng
720 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-926725-5
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Paperback
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07 October 2004
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This item is printed to order and supplied on a firm sale basis. Items which are printed to order are normally despatched and charged within 5-10 days.
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- A new addition to the well-established 'Blackstone's Guide' Series
- An expert yet accessible commentary on the Criminal Justice Act 2003, which is designed to modernize the criminal justice system by promoting efficiency, taking account of the interests of victims, and providing a clearer and more effective framework for sentencing
- Written by a team of leading authors who have produced successful Blackstone's Guides to various other criminal justice and procedure Acts
- Includes the full text of the Criminal Justice Act 2003
This book analyses, explains, and evaluates the Government's flagship criminal justice legislation, the Criminal Justice Act 2003. It provides an accessible commentary on the wide ranging and complex changes introduced by the Act, which will leave few areas of the criminal justice system untouched. The Act starts with changes to police powers, bail, cautioning, and pre-trial disclosure, and moves on to the abolition of committal proceedings and the introduction of the possibility of trials on indictment without juries. It then goes on to provide for prosecution appeals and a broad range of offences where a trial following acquittal can exceptionally be allowed.
The rules on evidence are significantly reformed providing firstly, a much wider basis on which evidence of bad character (including previous convictions) can be admitted, and secondly, for the admissibility of hearsay 'where it is not contrary to the interests of justice' to admit it. The Act also provides a major restatement and reform of the sentencing framework and the provisions for release on licence, and abolishes most of the categories of exemption from the duty to perform jury service.
Anyone working in the Criminal Justice System or interested in its operation will welcome this guide, which provides invaluable insights into the purposes of the Act and a detailed explanation of its provisions. The book also includes the full text of the
Act.Readership: All Criminal Law Practitioners: solicitors, barristers, the judiciary, magistrates, the Crown Prosecution Service, the Probation Service, the Police; academics and students of law, criminal justice, and criminology; reference libraries in the UK and worldwide.
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Richard Taylor, Head of School, Lancashire Law School, University of Central Lancashire, Martin Wasik, Professor of Criminal Justice, Keele University and Chairman, Sentencing Advisory Panel, and Roger Leng, Reader in Law, Warwick University
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"...this book must be seen as essential for all those involved in investigating and prosecuting crimes." - P.H. Law, December 2004
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1: Police powers
2: Bail, cautions, and charging
3: Disclosure pre-trial
4: Juries, and trials on indictment without juries
5: Allocation and transfer of either way cases and live links
6: Prosecution appeals against judges' rulings
7: Double jeopardy
8: Evidence of bad character
9: Hearsay
10: General sentencing provisions
11: Sentencing guidelines and standards
12: Non-custodial orders
13: Custodial sentences of less than 12 months
14: Dangerous offenders
15: Release on licence
Appendix
Text of the Criminal Justice Act 2003
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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