Conference paper
Taming the Unruly Criminal Law: Where do you Draw the Boundaries of Criminal Conduct?
Proceedings of the 62nd Australasian Law Teachers Association Conference
Australasian Law Teachers Association (ALTA) Conference, 62nd (Perth, Australia, 23-Sep-2007–26-Sep-2007)
Australian Law Teachers Association (ALTA)
2007
Abstract
Criminal law is extending its boundaries to capture conduct that was previously described as civil or regulatory in nature. For example, in some jurisdictions public nuisance, trespass, throwing things at a sporting match, photographing people in private places without their consent and BASE jumping from a building, are criminalised. The unruly nature of criminal law is a serious problem for law makers who need to know what conduct should be criminalised and what conduct should not be criminalised to inform the scope of future criminal laws. It is also a serious problem for members of the community who need to know the minimum standards of behaviour. The unruly nature of criminal law has occurred because several principles underpin the decision to criminalise conduct. The unruly nature of criminal law has not occurred because the decision has been based on the toss of a coin. Rather than recommending the shrinking of the criminal law to tame it, this paper explores the principles underpinning the decision to criminalise conduct. Such principles include harm, immorality, community welfare, individual autonomy and the politics of lawmaking. Analysing these principles will result in a greater understanding of the decision to criminalise conduct. To further understand the unruly nature of criminal law, this paper will contrast criminal wrongdoing from civil wrongdoing from the perspective of the wrongdoing and compensation distinction, public and private distinction, and the essentialist distinction. Making these contrasts will help determine where to draw the boundaries of criminal conduct.
Details
- Title
- Taming the Unruly Criminal Law: Where do you Draw the Boundaries of Criminal Conduct?
- Authors
- Kelley Burton (Author) - Queensland University of Technology
- Contributors
- Michael Adams (Editor)Barker A M David (Editor)Katherine Poludniewski (Editor)
- Publication details
- Proceedings of the 62nd Australasian Law Teachers Association Conference
- Conference details
- Australasian Law Teachers Association (ALTA) Conference, 62nd (Perth, Australia, 23-Sep-2007–26-Sep-2007)
- Publisher
- Australian Law Teachers Association (ALTA)
- Date published
- 2007
- Copyright note
- Copyright © 2007 The Author. Reproduced here with permission.
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland; School of Law and Society; Sexual Violence Research and Prevention Unit; School of Law and Criminology - Legacy
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99449127302621
- Output Type
- Conference paper
Metrics
83 File views/ downloads
561 Record Views