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Criminal Law and Criminal Justice research

27 August 2024

The Canterbury School of Law has a distinguished tradition of research in criminal law. The School pioneered teaching and scholarship of criminal justice in New Zealand. The current members of our Criminal Law & Criminal Justice Group work across a range of legal areas. Learn more about Criminal Law and Criminal Justice research at UC.

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The Canterbury School of Law has a distinguished tradition of research in criminal law. The School pioneered the teaching and scholarship of criminal justice in New Zealand.

The current members of the Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Group work across the fields of Transnational Criminal Law, International Criminal Law, International Human Rights Law, the Law of Evidence, Transnational Organised Crime, Financial Crime, Cybercrime, Trial Process, Criminal Procedure and Sentencing.

Members of the Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Group聽

  • 鈥楾he criminal justice responses to the Christchurch Shooting鈥櫬鈥 Professor Neil Boister and Dr James Mehigan
  • 鈥楤uilding Resilience in Criminal Justice: Lessons from COVID-19鈥 鈥撀Led by Associate Professor Debra Wilson
  • 鈥楾rial process in cases of intimate partner sexual violence鈥櫬鈥 funded by the Borrin Foundation and led by Professor Elisabeth McDonald
  • 鈥楥omparing jury trials with judge alone trials鈥聽鈥 funded by the Law Foundation and led by Professor Elisabeth McDonald
  • 鈥楥orruption and Money Laundering in the Pacific鈥櫬鈥撀燣ed by聽Dr聽Chat Nguyen
  • 鈥楥ultural Genocide: Contingency, International Criminal Law and Indigenous Rights鈥櫬鈥撀燣ed by聽Dr聽Shea Esterling
  • 鈥楥ulture in Conflict and Conflicts: Exploring the Protection of Cultural Heritage through The Prosecutor v. Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi鈥櫬鈥撀燣ed by聽Dr聽Shea Esterling (Read more about .)

  • Professor Neil Boister led the project聽鈥楾ransnational Security: Regional Integration in the Suppression of Transnational Crime鈥, partly funded by the Jean Monet EUCN Networks grant (2018 鈥 2020), with participants from the University of the South Pacific, the University of Vienna, the University of Queensland, the University of Wollongong, and the University of New South Wales.聽In 2014 he was awarded the Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Prize from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Germany for his work on transnational criminal law. In 2015 he was awarded the New 九州影院Law Foundation鈥檚 International Fellowship to undertake a research project on the simplification of the law of extradition. His book on聽The Law of Extradition in New Zealand聽will be published by Thomson Reuters in 2020.聽He is currently editing Histories of Transnational Criminal law (for OUP 鈥 to be published in 2021), based on a colloquium held in Hannover in October 2019 and funded by the Volkswagen Foundation.聽As an expert consultant in 2019, he recently drafted the 鈥楨lements of Crimes鈥 and accompanying explanatory report for ten transnational crimes in the jurisdiction of the African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples Rights, African Court Research Initiative, funded by the Open Society Foundation.
  • Professor Elisabeth McDonald was awarded a Marsden grant for the research of聽鈥楻ape myths as barriers to fair trial process鈥, resulting in a 2020 book of the same name.
  • Professor Robin Palmer was the project leader of the multi-university NZLF-funded project of Forensic Brainwave Analysis (FBA) (2018-2019), in cooperation with the US and local (Police and Corrections) partners.
  • Dr Chat Nguyen was the principal investigator in the project:聽鈥楧iffusion of the Budapest Convention on cybercrime and the development of cybercrime legislation in Pacific Island Countries鈥.

  • Professor Neil Boister in the UC Connect discussion on the聽
  • Professor Elisabeth McDonald鈥檚 article on聽
  • Professor Elisabeth McDonald talks to Jesse Mulligan about the partial defence of provocation and her current research聽.
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