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Criminal law, philosophy and public health practice

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2013Description: 268p xiISBN:
  • 9781107022782
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 345.024200 VIE
Contents:
Table of Contents 1. Introduction A. M. Viens, John Coggon and Anthony S. Kessel; 2. Criminal law, regulatory frameworks and public health Roger Brownsword; 3. Drugs, crime and public health: an insight from criminology Doug Husak; 4. Criminal law, drugs and harm reduction Tom Walker; 5. Morality and strategy in politicising tobacco use: criminal law, public health, and philosophy John Coggon; 6. Pursued by the 'fat' police? Prosecuting the parents of obese children Tracey Elliot; 7. Disease transmission, liability and criminal law James Chalmers; 8. Compulsion, surveillance, testing and treatment: a truly 'criminal' matter? Jean V. McHale; 9. Epidemiological criminology and violence prevention: addressing the co-occurrence of criminal violence and poor health outcomes Roberto H. Potter and Timothy A. Akers; 10. Forensic epidemiology: strange bedfellows or the perfect match? Can public health and criminal law work together without losing their souls? Zita Lazzarini; 11. From the criminal to the consensual: the shifting mechanisms of environmental regulation Robert G. Lee and Mark Stallworthy; 12. Criminal law and global health governance David P. Fidler
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction A. M. Viens, John Coggon and Anthony S. Kessel;
2. Criminal law, regulatory frameworks and public health Roger Brownsword;
3. Drugs, crime and public health: an insight from criminology Doug Husak;
4. Criminal law, drugs and harm reduction Tom Walker;
5. Morality and strategy in politicising tobacco use: criminal law, public health, and philosophy John Coggon;
6. Pursued by the 'fat' police? Prosecuting the parents of obese children Tracey Elliot;
7. Disease transmission, liability and criminal law James Chalmers;
8. Compulsion, surveillance, testing and treatment: a truly 'criminal' matter? Jean V. McHale;
9. Epidemiological criminology and violence prevention: addressing the co-occurrence of criminal violence and poor health outcomes Roberto H. Potter and Timothy A. Akers;
10. Forensic epidemiology: strange bedfellows or the perfect match? Can public health and criminal law work together without losing their souls? Zita Lazzarini;
11. From the criminal to the consensual: the shifting mechanisms of environmental regulation Robert G. Lee and Mark Stallworthy;
12. Criminal law and global health governance David P. Fidler

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