Aspen Publishing
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Criminal Law: Case Studies and Controversies, Fifth Edition

Paul H. Robinson, Shima Baradaran Baughman, Michael T. Cahill

$322.00

  • ISBN: 9781543809015

New print textbook includes access to the eBook, study center, outline tool, and other resources at casebookconnect.com via lifetime access code inside the print book. Plus, access the eBook immediately with the temporary access code available after checkout while you await the full access code in your shipment.

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  • Description

    Buy a new version of this textbook and receive access to the Connected eBook with Study Center on CasebookConnect, including: lifetime access to the online ebook with highlight, annotation, and search capabilities; practice questions from your favorite study aids; an outline tool and other helpful resources. Connected eBooks provide what you need most to be successful in your law school classes. Learn more about Connected eBooks.

    Criminal Law: Case Studies & Controversies eschews traditional reliance on judicial opinions in favor of an innovative and dynamic method of criminal law instruction that is centered on statutory interpretation and case studies. Examination of real-world problems allows first-year law students to not only develop familiarity with the criminal law doctrine necessary for potential careers as prosecutors or defense attorneys, but also hone crucial skills for lawyering in general. Provocative case studies provide background for engaging class discussion and challenge students to tackle applying doctrine in real-world situations. When useful, the book provides actual cases from a variety of jurisdictions to further illuminate the concepts with which students have already been forced to grapple.

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  • Additional Product Details
    Publication Date: 9/15/2020
    Copyright Year: 2021
    Pages: 1,120
    ISBNs:
    Connected eBook with Study Center + Print Book: 9781543809015
    Connected eBook with Study Center: 9781543826647
    eBook:9781543823356

    Detailed Table of Contents (PDF Download)

  • Author Information

    Paul H. Robinson

    Robinson is one of the world’s leading criminal law scholars. A prolific writer and lecturer, Robinson has published articles in virtually all of the top law reviews, lectured in more than 100 cities in 33 states and 26 countries, and had his writings appear in 13 languages. A former federal prosecutor and counsel for the US Senate Subcommittee on Criminal Laws and Procedures, he was the lone dissenter when the US Sentencing Commission promulgated the current federal sentencing guidelines. He is the author or editor of 14 books, including the standard lawyer’s reference on criminal law defenses, three Oxford monographs on criminal law theory, a highly regarded criminal law treatise, and an innovative case studies course book.


    He is the lead editor of Criminal Law Conversations (Oxford, 2009), a debate involving more than 100 scholars from around the world, and the author of Intuitions of Justice and the Utility of Desert (Oxford 2013); Distributive Principles of Criminal Law (Oxford 2008, also in Spanish and Chinese); and Structure and Function in Criminal Law (Oxford 1997 also in Chinese). Robinson recently completed two criminal code reform projects in the United States and the first modern Islamic penal code under the auspices of the U.N. Development Program. He is currently commissioned to draft criminal codes for Delaware and Somalia. He also writes for general audiences, including popular books such as Would You Convict? (NYU 1999), Law Without Justice (Oxford 2005), Pirates, Prisoners, and Lepers: Lessons from Life Outside the Law (Potomac Books 2015), and the forthcoming The Vigilante Echo.

    Michael Cahill

    Cahill, who has served as co-dean and professor at Rutgers Law School since July 2016 is a noted scholar in criminal law and health law and policy. His criminal law scholarship focuses on substantive criminal law and seeks to translate moral theories and principles into workable real-world legal systems, institutions, and rules, and he has been published numerous book chapters and articles in scholarly and legal journals, including Northwestern University Law Review, Texas Law Review, Iowa Law Review, Washington University Law Review, and American Journal of Law and Medicine, among other publications. In addition, Cahill has co-authored several books, including Law Without Justice: Why Criminal Law Doesn’t Give People What They Deserve (Oxford University Press, 2006) and Criminal Law (Aspen Treatise Series, 2nd ed., 2012).

    Prior to joining Rutgers, Cahill was served on the faculty of Brooklyn Law School, where he was a tenured faculty member and served as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Vice Dean, and as a Visiting Assistant Professor of Law at Chicago-Kent College of Law. Before entering academia, Cahill was deeply engaged in legal reform efforts, including work on projects to rewrite the Illinois and Kentucky criminal codes in his roles as as staff director of the Illinois Criminal Code Rewrite and Reform Commission and as a consultant for the Penal Code Reform Project for the Kentucky Criminal Justice Council.

    Shima Baradaran Baughman

    Baughman is a Professor at the University of Utah College of Law, and her teaching and scholarship focus on criminal law, criminal procedure, and international law. Baughman is a noted expert on bail and pretrial prediction, but her scholarship covers an expansive array of areas including criminal justice policy, prosecutors, drugs, search and seizure, international law and terrorism, and race and violent crime. Baughman frequently employs advanced empirical modeling and randomized controlled trials in her scholarship, and her work has been featured on National Public Radio and in such publications as the New York Times, the Economist, the Washington Post, and Forbes. Baughman has presented her work at a number of law schools across the nation, including Stanford, Cornell, NYU, and UCLA, and her articles have been published in University of Pennsylvania Law Review, USC Law Review, Georgetown Law Journal, Texas Law Review, George Washington Law Review, Minnesota Law Review, and the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies.

    Baughman has served on a number of civic and professional committees, including the Utah Sentencing Commission, AALS Criminal Justice Section Executive Committee, and the ABA Pretrial Justice Taskforce, for which she served as Co-chair of the Committee on Crime Prevention, Pretrial Release & Police Practices. Before joining the University of Utah faculty, Baughman taught at Brigham Young University Law School and served as a Fulbright Senior Scholar. She is currently working on a book, Bail and Mass Incarceration, with Cambridge University Press.

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