Available Formats
Transformations in Criminal Jurisdiction: Extraterritoriality and Enforcement
By (Author) Michel Floinn
Edited by Lindsay Farmer
Edited by Julia Hrnle
Edited by David Ormerod KC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
24th August 2023
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Public international law: criminal law
IT and Communications law / Postal laws and regulations
Comparative law
345.0122
Hardback
400
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Can traditional approaches to territorial jurisdiction adapt to the new global reality Leading experts in criminal law and internet law unite to address this fundamental question. They consider whether this can be done through the development of parallel concepts such as extraterritorial or universal jurisdiction, or whether the situation requires completely new kinds of approaches to criminal jurisdiction and transnational crime. The book illuminates the way in which questions of jurisdiction are becoming increasingly important to the investigation, prosecution, and punishment of crime, as with the growth of technology and the internet many crimes no longer take place within neat national boundaries. Increasingly, criminal lawyers grapple with complex answers to seemingly simple questions: - Where was the crime actually committed - Which body has authority to investigate - Which court has jurisdiction to hear the case and impose a sentence Part 1 looks at theoretical perspectives on criminal jurisdiction and how traditional jurisdictional concepts and understandings are being challenged, transformed, and reimagined in the era of the internet, cloud computing and social media. Part 2 homes in on the investigative powers of the state, to explore how these practical issues can inform the continuing transformation of current challenges.
Michel Floinn is Lecturer in Law and Lindsay Farmer is Professor of Law, both at the University of Glasgow, UK. Julia Hrnle is Professor of Internet Law at Queen Mary University of London, UK. David Ormerod KC is Director of the Criminal Law Centre at University College London, UK.