Description
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Accessorial Liability after Jogee by Edited by Dr Beatrice Krebs
Hailed as a ‘moment of genuine legal history’ the judgment in iR v Jogee/i [2016] UKSC 8 abolished the head of liability known as parasitic accessory liability and replaced it with (re-stated) principles of assisting and encouraging fundamentally changing the law of accessibility liability. This edited collection with contributions by experts in the field of complicity examines this ground-breaking case. It looks at subsequent Court of Appeal decisions and cases from other jurisdictions that re-considered their own joint enterprise principles in the wake of iJogee/i and provides solutions to the problems it created for criminal law theory and practice.