Actus Reus, Mens Rea and the structures of criminal liability Flashcards

1
Q

What is Actus Reus?

A
  1. The conduct made criminal by a statutory offence
  2. A link is necessary between the person and the harm
  3. 3 types:
    - Conduct - The conduct in itself is prohibited  Only requires conduct and fault, there is no need for a causal connection between the harm and the offender (since harm is not necessarily present)  Usually dealt with under strict liability offences (but prohibited in GR)
    - Result - A consequence is necessary
    - Circumstances - Certain qualities are necessary for liability
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2
Q

What is Mens Rea?

A
  1. In Civil law:
    - The mental or subjective element of a crime - Direct intent, indirect intent…
    - The kind of intent matters as it will reflect the degree of punishment
  2. In Common law:
    - Descriptive sense - The different forms of intent necessary for a specific offence
    - Normative sense - The blameworthiness of the offender
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3
Q

What is the bipartite system of criminal liability?

A
  1. Actus Reus:
    - Was there an offence?
    - Was it unlawful? Justifications can apply
  2. Mens Rea:
    - Was it intentional?
    - Was it blameworthy? Excuses can apply
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4
Q

What is the criticism of the bipartite system of criminal liability?

A
  1. It fails to account for the entire range of defences between justifications and excuses
  2. It mixes between normative Mens Rea and descriptive Mens Rea
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5
Q

What is the tripartite system of criminal liability?

A
  1. Fulfilment of offence definition:
    - Actus Reus
    - Mens Rea
  2. Wrongdoing  Here Justifications can apply
  3. Blameworthiness  Here excuses can apply
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