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Criminal law --- Accomplices --- Accomplices. --- Criminal law. --- United States.
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Securities fraud --- Accomplices --- Liability (Law) --- Actions and defenses
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Criminal law. Criminal procedure --- Great Britain --- Accomplices --- Criminal liability --- -Criminal liability --- -#RBIB:XTOF --- Accountability, Criminal --- Criminal accountability --- Criminal responsibility --- Liability, Criminal --- Responsibility, Criminal --- Liability (Law) --- Abettors --- Accessories (Criminal law) --- Principal and accessory --- Criminal law --- Principals (Criminal law) --- Law and legislation --- #RBIB:XTOF --- Accomplices - Great Britain --- Criminal liability - Great Britain
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Accomplices (International law). --- Ansvar (juridik). --- Delaktighet i brott. --- Internationell rätt. --- Liability (Law). --- International law. --- Complicité (droit pénal) --- Droit international pénal --- Accomplices --- Responsabilité pénale (droit international) --- International crimes. --- International law --- Droit international pénal. --- Complicité (droit pénal) --- Droit international pénal. --- Responsabilité pénale (droit international)
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"This systematic analysis of State complicity in international law focuses on the rules of State responsibility. Combining a theoretical perspective on complicity based on the concept of the international rule of law with a thorough analysis of international practice, Helmut Philip Aust establishes what forms of support for wrongful conduct entail responsibility of complicit States and sheds light on the consequences of complicity in terms of reparation and implementation. Furthermore, he highlights how international law provides for varying degrees of responsibility in cases of complicity, depending on whether peremptory norms have been violated or special subject areas such as the law of collective security are involved. The book shows that the concept of State complicity is firmly grounded in international law, and that the international rule of law may serve as a conceptual paradigm for today's international legal order"--
Government liability (International law) --- International criminal law. --- Accomplices. --- Abettors --- Accessories (Criminal law) --- Principal and accessory --- Criminal law --- Principals (Criminal law) --- Criminal law, International --- ICL (International criminal law) --- International law --- Criminal jurisdiction --- International crimes --- International claims --- Sovereignty --- Claims --- United Nations. --- International criminal law --- Accomplices --- Law --- General and Others
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Criminal law. Criminal procedure --- Tort and negligence --- France --- Master and servant --- Criminal liability --- Respondeat superior --- Employeur et employé (Droit) --- Responsabilité pénale --- Employeur et employé (Droit) --- Responsabilité pénale --- Tort liability of employers --- Vicarious liability --- Accomplices --- Agency (Law) --- Duress (Law) --- Liability (Law) --- Torts --- Respondeat superior - France --- Droit social --- Contrat de travail --- Responsabilité professionnelle
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Vicarious liability is controversial: a principle of strict liability in an area dominated by fault-based liability. By making an innocent party pay compensation for the torts of another, it can also appear unjust. Yet it is a principle found in all Western legal systems, be they civil law or common law. Despite uncertainty as to its justifications, it is accepted as necessary. In our modern global economy, we are unlikely to understand its meaning and rationale through study of one legal system alone. Using her considerable experience as a comparative tort lawyer, Paula Giliker examines the principle of vicarious liability (or, to a civil lawyer, liability for the acts of others) in England and Wales, Australia, Canada, France and Germany, and with reference to legal systems in countries such as the United States, New Zealand and Spain.
Respondeat superior. --- Third parties (Law) --- Third persons --- Contracts --- Dispute resolution (Law) --- Tort liability of employers --- Vicarious liability --- Accomplices --- Agency (Law) --- Criminal liability --- Duress (Law) --- Liability (Law) --- Master and servant --- Torts --- Respondeat superior --- Law --- General and Others --- Royaume-Uni --- France --- Allemagne --- Espagne
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Accessory liability is an often neglected but very important topic across all areas of private law. By providing a principled analytical framework for the law of accessories and identifying common themes and problems that arise in the law, this book provides much-needed clarity. It explains the fundamental concepts that are used to impose liability on accessories, particularly the conduct and mental elements of liability: 'involvement' in the primary wrong and (generally) knowledge. It also sets out in detail the specific rules and principles of liability as these operate in different areas of common law, equity and statute. A comparative study across common law and criminal law jurisdictions, including the United States, also sheds new light on what is and what is not accessory liability.
Liability (Law) --- Joint tortfeasors. --- Correality and solidarity. --- Accomplices. --- Correality and solidarity --- "Joint and several" --- Solidarity (Civil law) --- Solidary obligations --- Debtor and creditor --- Obligations (Law) --- Apportionment of liability among joint tortfeasors --- Joint torts --- Torts --- Accountability --- Legal responsibility --- Responsibility, Legal --- Responsibility (Law) --- Civil law --- Contracts --- Abettors --- Accessories (Criminal law) --- Principal and accessory --- Criminal law --- Principals (Criminal law) --- Law and legislation
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