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Media Law

Media Law

Corporations and the Privilege against Self-Incrimination

Stijn Lamberigts, Eubelius, Belgium This book asks whether the well-established privilege against self-incrimination applies to corporations, whether it should, and if so, to what extent. Those questions have an increasingly important EU criminal law dimension. To answer them, this study draws on comparative insights from Belgium, England and Wales, and the US; as well as case law of the ECtHR and EU Law. It covers the established CJEU case law in competition cases, the recent CJEU ruling in DB v Consob and addresses Directive (EU) 2016/343. It will appeal to scholars of EU criminal law, but also to white-collar and competition practitioners.

The Principle of Mutual Trust in EU Criminal Law

Auke Willems, University of Liverpool This book develops a conceptual framework of the principle of mutual trust in EU criminal law. The book demonstrates that mutual trust is multifaceted: combining the elements essential to a successful EU criminal law, as part of the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice. The book approaches trust from multiple angles: a study of social science literature, a meticulous assessment of mutual trust in EU criminal law, a study of trust in US interstate criminal justice cooperation, finally identifying a comprehensive approach to tackle trust related difficulties in EU criminal law.

UK September 2022 • US September 2022 • 368 pages HB 9781509953318 • £85.00 / $115.00 ePub 9781509953325 • £76.50 / $105.78 ePdf 9781509953332 • £76.50 / $105.78 Series: Hart Studies in European Criminal Law • Hart Publishing UK August 2022 • US August 2022 • 352 pages PB 9781509944767 • £39.99 / $54.95 Previously published in HB 9781509924547 ePub 9781509924554 • £72.00 / $100.29 ePdf 9781509924561 • £72.00 / $100.29 Series: Hart Studies in European Criminal Law • Hart Publishing

Evidence, Respect, and Truth

Knowledge and Justice in Legal Trials

Liat Levanon, King's College London, UK Should statistical evidence be used as legal evidence? This book considers whether statistical evidence should be used as legal evidence. It looks at the relationship between evidence, randomness and justifying reasons. A distinction is drawn between evidence that can justify critical judgements and evidence that can only justify noncritical judgements. The book argues that evidence can justify critical judgement only if it can support all the propositions of the judgement, thus leaving none of the propositions random and considers how evidence can justify non-critical judgements even where it leaves some propositions random.

UK September 2022 • US September 2022 • 208 pages HB 9781509942657 • £70.00 / $95.00 ePub 9781509942664 • £63.00 / $87.92 ePdf 9781509942671 • £63.00 / $87.92 Hart Publishing

Cassis de Dijon

40 Years On

Edited by Albertina Albors-Llorens, University of Cambridge, UK, Catherine Barnard, University of Cambridge, UK & Brigitte Leucht, University of Portsmouth, UK In 1979 the Court of Justice gave judgment on the famous decision in Cassis de Dijon. This book revisits this decision with the benefit of hindsight: why did the Court of Justice decide Cassis de Dijon as it did? How has the decision been developed by the EU? And how has it been used to develop international trade? This book brings together some leading writers in the field of EU trade law, constitutional law and European history for a fresh examination of this ground-breaking judgment, looking at it from the perspective of its past, its present, and its future.

UK August 2022 • US August 2022 • 304 pages PB 9781509945795 • £41.99 / $57.95 Previously published in HB 9781509936632 ePub 9781509936649 • £76.50 / $105.78 ePdf 9781509936656 • £76.50 / $105.78 Hart Publishing

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