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12 - Constructing Property in Criminal Law

from Section IV - Property and Propriety

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Celia Wells
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
Oliver Quick
Affiliation:
University of Bristol
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Summary

We now move to the legal context to consider how property interests and threats to property are constructed by criminal laws. Just as many ‘offences against the person’ have public order or property-affecting aspects, so many ‘property offences’ have public order or person-affecting repercussions. The relative seriousness of the offences enacted in the Theft Acts 1968 and 1978 and the Fraud Act 2006 – theft, handling stolen goods, burglary and aggravated burglary, robbery, taking a conveyance without authority, abstracting electricity, going equipped for stealing, blackmail, making off without payment and fraud – relate not only to the extent to which they threaten property rights but also to violations of trust and the threats to social order, authority and the person which they pose. Robbery and aggravated burglary attract maximum sentences of life imprisonment largely on the latter ground, and the fact that there is a higher maximum for handling than for theft is perhaps to be explained not just by the argument that thieves could not survive without handlers and thus that handling is an important focus for punishment and prevention (after all, the converse is equally true) but in terms of the idea that handling systematically supports the institution of theft in a way which potentially undermines the system of property entitlements more thoroughly than does theft.

In considering criminal law's construction of property offences, we should not, however, confine our view to the Theft Acts.

Type
Chapter
Information
Lacey, Wells and Quick Reconstructing Criminal Law
Text and Materials
, pp. 372 - 448
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Jack, Beatson and Andrew, SimesterStealing One's Own Property’ (1999) 115 Law Quarterly Review 115.Google Scholar
Chan, W. and Simester, A.Duress, Necessity: How Many Defences’ (2005) 16 Kings Law Journal121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duff, R. A.Criminal Attempts (Clarendon Press 1996).
Alison, Firth ‘The Criminalisation of Offences against Intellectual Property’, in Loveland, I. (ed.) Frontiers of Criminality (Sweet & Maxwell 1995), p. 149.
Jerome, HallTheft, Law and Society (2nd edn, Bobbs-Merrill 1952).
Stephen, ShuteAppropriation and the Law of Theft’ (2002) Criminal Law Review 445.Google Scholar
Keith, SmithMust Heroes Behave Heroically?’ (1989) Criminal Law Review 622.Google Scholar
Martin, WasikCrime and the Computer (Oxford University Press 1991).

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