A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO CRIMINAL PROCEDURE IN NEW ZEALAND is designed to be a convenient, practical and portable handbook for anyone working with the new criminal procedure legislation, and associated rules and regulations.
"The second in a series of litigation skills publications, this practical guidebook aimed at junior to intermediate defence lawyers working in the District Court, including clear guidance and useful tools such as sample documents and ...
This book is intended to fill that gap.
48 Iennings v Buchanan [2005] 2 NZLR 577 (PC). 49 Hyams 1; Peterson [1991] 3 NZLR 648 (CA). See also Peters 11 Television New Zealand Ltd [2011] NZCA 231. 50 [1999] NZAR 241. 51 J Burrows and U Cheer Media Law in New. Defamation 21.
The book is aimed at junior and intermediate lawyers who appear in appeals in the District Court, High Court and to a lesser degree the Court of Appeal.
The book also contains invaluable information about sentencing, appeals, counsel's professional and ethical obligations, legal aid and the Public Defender Service, the use of audio-visual links, diversion, jury selection, jury decision ...
Adams on Criminal Law has been New Zealand's most trusted criminal law reference for over 40 years. The Student Edition looks at the Crimes Act 1961 and Criminal Procedure Act 2011 and offers practical commentary on key sections.
The book provides detailed account of how to conduct an appeal in a criminal matter from the various courts in New Zealand, and includes commentary on judicial review in criminal matters.
This book was written to support health and safety practitioners and professionals through that implementation and transition.
The book details the risk-based approach taken by legislators and the supervisors, and explores the application of the Act, as well as the policies, procedures and controls needed to meet the money laundering and terrorist financing risks ...
... we should be engaging with, related to critiques of distancing, standardisation, dehumanisation, quantification, and decontextualisation (e.g. Jackson, Paulus, & Woolf, 2018), these critiques are themselves often decontextualised.