Criminal Justice in Crisis (Law in Its Social Setting)

Criminal Justice in Crisis (Law in Its Social Setting)

by Michael Mc Conville (Editor), Lee Bridges (Editor)

Synopsis

In recent years the English criminal justice system has been shaken to its foundations by an unprecedented series of miscarriages of justice. The Guildford Four, the Maguire Seven, the Birmingham Six, Judith Ward and Stefan Kiszko are among the most prominent of those eventually cleared of serious crimes after many years in prison. While the sheer numbers of cases involved are troubling, it is the underlying causes of wrongful conviction which threw the system's credibility into question and led to the establishment of the Royal Commission on Criminal Justice chaired by Lord Runciman. In Criminal Justice in Crisis an internationally distinguished group of leading academics, practitioners and campaigners critically examine the Royal Commission's Report with its proposals for removal of the right of a defendant to elect jury trial, the introduction of institutionalised plea bargaining, a compulsory obligation on the defence to disclose its case prior to trial, and extended police powers over suspects. The authors provide detailed criticisms of the Report at empirical, practical, policy and theoretical levels. At best the Report is seen as unhelpful, at worst it is considered a dangerous contribution to reform efforts. This important book will be welcomed by scholars, practitioners and researchers as the only extended analysis of the Runciman Report available and for providing a broad analysis of the theory and politics of criminal justice.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 334
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Published: 29 Jun 1994

ISBN 10: 1858980038
ISBN 13: 9781858980034

Media Reviews
`. . . a welcome publication providing further useful fuel for the post-Runciman debate.' -- Steven Greer, British Journal of Criminology
`Another excellent collection of 28 articles responding to the Royal Commission on Criminal Justice, based on a conference held at Warwick University in September 1993.' -- Labour Campaign for Criminal Justice Newsletter
Author Bio
Edited by Mike McConville, Emeritus Professor and Honorary Fellow, Centre for Rights and Justice, Faculty of Law, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and Lee Bridges, former Principal Research Fellow, University of Warwick, UK