Blackett Rant on the Court Martial and Service Law
Buch, Englisch,
528 Seiten, Gebunden, Format (B × H): 179 mm x 252 mm, Gewicht: 1034 g
Revised,
528 Seiten, Gebunden, Format (B × H): 179 mm x 252 mm, Gewicht: 1034 g
ISBN: 978-0-19-953468-5
Verlag: OXFORD UNIV PR
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review, removes old offences, establishes new offences and introduces a new sentencing regime reflecting the changes in the civil system brought about by the Criminal Justice Act 2003. It also extends the jurisdiction of Court Martial to allow it to try certain serious offences committed in the UK (treason,
murder, manslaughter and rape), brings the new sentencing provisions introduced into civilian practice by the Criminal Justice Act 2003 into the Service jurisidiction as well as making changes to the Service Civilian Court following the extension of jurisdiction over wider sections of civilians.
This new edition has been fully revised to provide detailed coverage of the Act, which is due to come into force in October 2009. It includes a new chapter reviewing and assessing the impact of key cases in the European Court of Human Rights; new material highlighting the parallels and differences between procedure in the Crown Court and Court Martial; and a more in-depth treatment of sentencing matters. The appendices will include the various Rules relating to Service courts, relevant extracts
from the Act and a list of all 65 Statutory Instruments. This is an essential handbook for those practising in the Service justice system and for academics researching Service law.
Blackett, Jeff
HHJ Jeff Blackett is the Judge Advocate General of the Armed Forces and a Senior Circuit Judge. He was previously the Naval Judge Advocate from 1989 to 2003. He co-authored the current edition of Courts-Martial, Discipline, and the Criminal Process in the Armed Services, and has contributed to Halsbury's Laws.
Legal personnel in the armed services; solicitors and barristers involved in court martial work; academics in the field of criminal law and process/military justice.
review, removes old offences, establishes new offences and introduces a new sentencing regime reflecting the changes in the civil system brought about by the Criminal Justice Act 2003. It also extends the jurisdiction of Court Martial to allow it to try certain serious offences committed in the UK (treason,
murder, manslaughter and rape), brings the new sentencing provisions introduced into civilian practice by the Criminal Justice Act 2003 into the Service jurisidiction as well as making changes to the Service Civilian Court following the extension of jurisdiction over wider sections of civilians.
This new edition has been fully revised to provide detailed coverage of the Act, which is due to come into force in October 2009. It includes a new chapter reviewing and assessing the impact of key cases in the European Court of Human Rights; new material highlighting the parallels and differences between procedure in the Crown Court and Court Martial; and a more in-depth treatment of sentencing matters. The appendices will include the various Rules relating to Service courts, relevant extracts
from the Act and a list of all 65 Statutory Instruments. This is an essential handbook for those practising in the Service justice system and for academics researching Service law.
Blackett, Jeff
HHJ Jeff Blackett is the Judge Advocate General of the Armed Forces and a Senior Circuit Judge. He was previously the Naval Judge Advocate from 1989 to 2003. He co-authored the current edition of Courts-Martial, Discipline, and the Criminal Process in the Armed Services, and has contributed to Halsbury's Laws.
Legal personnel in the armed services; solicitors and barristers involved in court martial work; academics in the field of criminal law and process/military justice.
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