Product Details
Criminal Law

Criminal Law
By Tony Storey, Alan Lidbury

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Product Description

This textbook covers the Criminal Law option of the A-level law syllabus, and provides at the same time an ideal introduction for anybody coming to the subject for the first time. The book covers all A-level syllabuses/specification requirements, and is written by the principal examiner and principal assistant examiner in Criminal Law for one of the major examination boards. It contains extensive case illustration, and a range of examination related questions and activities. There is a special focus on key skills, and on the new synoptic assessment syllabus requirements.It presents a fully updated new edition for new 4-unit specifications for A-level law. It provides full coverage of A2 Criminal law options taught from September 2007. It includes new OCR specimen papers with guidance on suggested answers. It contains a new OCR section C 'objective assessment' questions with suggested answers. It is intended for students in schools and colleges taking the new AS/A level specification; teachers, lecturers, school/college libraries.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #34671 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-09-14
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 440 pages

Customer Reviews

Very nice guide for A-level5
If you're studying Crime as your law option at A-level (or even if your just interested, or doing higher qualifications), I'd highly reccomend this book. It's fantastic in that it seperates cases from the 'blurb' of the book by putting the cases in grey boxes. This is extremely useful if you are reading up on a set of cases from a variety of books (I had about four different text books for my A-level which I consulted, this being the easiest).

It's easy to read, and the diagrams and tables really ease the understanding of some of the areas - defences particularly.

I note that the defences were quite useful in this book - it gives a few pages of prose for each different one, with a few important cases (eg. Majewski for intoxication), but also references the importance of bringing it all together.

It does contain a section on 'key skills', but it would have been more useful if it contained the actual real skills you need to bring your studies together for examination - you know, suggestions on how to remember cases, how to write Prob Questions etc.

A very useful text, especially if you combine it with the latest edition of Diana Roe's text, and maybe backed up by the Key Facts or Nutshells/cases on Crime.