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E-raamat: Fitness to Plead: International and Comparative Perspectives

Edited by (Professor of Criminal Policy and Mental Health, De Montfort University), Edited by (Professor of Law, Auckland University of Technology)
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The law relating to fitness to plead is an increasingly important area of the criminal law. While criminalization may be justified whenever an offender commits a sufficiently serious moral wrong requiring that he or she be called to account, the doctrine of fitness to plead calls this principle into question in the case of a person who lacks the capacity or ability to participate meaningfully in a criminal trial. In light of the emerging focus on capacity-based approaches to decision-making and the international human rights requirement that the law should treat defendants fairly, this volume offers a benchmark for the theory and practice of fitness to plead, providing readers with a unique opportunity to consider differing perspectives and debate on the future development and direction of a doctrine which has up till now been under-discussed and under-researched.

The fitness to plead rules stand as an exception to notions of public accountability for criminal wrongdoing yet, despite the doctrine's long-standing function in criminal procedure, it has proven complex to apply in practice and has given rise to many varied legislative models and considerable litigation in different jurisdictions. Particularly troublesome is the question of what is to be done with someone who has been found unfit to stand trial. Here the law is required to balance the need to protect those defendants who are unable to participate effectively in their own trial, whether permanently or for a defined period, and the need to protect the public from people who may have caused serious social harm as a result of their antisocial behaviour. The challenge for law reformers, legislators, and judges, is to create rules that ensure that everyone who can properly be tried is tried, while seeking to preserve confidence in the fairness of the legal system by ensuring that people who cannot properly engage in the criminal trial process are not forced to endure it.

Arvustused

I recommend Fitness to Plead: International and Comparative Perspectives for law students, legal scholars and advocates, and policy makers, as well as members of the public who are interested in the intersection of mental disorders and the criminal law. * Goldwynn Lewis, Canadian Law Library Review * All of the chapters in this work are well-written (and, I suspect, well-edited). The whole work is eminently readable. I recommend it highly to scholars and practitioners of criminal law and criminal justice for the many insights it offers on how to move this area forward in a humane yet pragmatic fashion. * Roger S. Clark, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books *

Table of Cases
xvii
Table of Legislation
xxvii
List of Contributors
xxxiii
1 Introduction
1(10)
Ronnie Mackay
Warren Brookbanks
2 The Development of Unfitness to Plead in English Law
11(22)
Ronnie Mackay
3 Unfitness to Plead in England and Wales: A Practitioner's View of a Plea in Evolution
33(22)
Rudi Fortson
4 Reforming the Law of Unfitness to Plead in England and Wales: A Recent History
55(26)
Miranda Bevan
David Ormerod
5 Unfitness for Trial in Scots Law
81(24)
Gerry Maher
6 Unfit to Stand Trial: Canadian Law and Practice
105(22)
Gerry Ferguson
7 The Development of Unfitness to Stand Trial in New Zealand
127(26)
Warren Brookbanks
8 Fitness to Stand Trial under Australian Law
153(22)
Ian Freckelton
9 Fitness for Criminal Adjudication: The Emerging Significance of Decisional Competence in the United States
175(32)
Richard J. Bonnie
10 Involuntary Competence in United States Criminal Law
207(24)
Stephen J. Morse
11 The Right to Fair Preliminary Investigation and Trial for Vulnerable Defendants: The Case of the Netherlands
231(24)
PHPHMC van Kempen
12 Competency to Stand Trial in Italy
255(18)
Alberto Cadoppi
Mattia Celva
13 Fitness to Stand Trial under International Criminal Law
273(26)
Ian Freckelton
Magda Karagiannakis
14 Conclusion
299(10)
Ronnie Mackay
Warren Brookbanks
Index 309
Ronnie Mackay is Professor of Criminal Policy and Mental Health at De Montfort University.

Warren Brookbanks is Professor of Law at Auckland University of Technology.