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Criminal Law Lecture - Year One, Term 1: Defences to Offences Against the Person

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Criminal Law Lecture - Year One, Term 1: Defences to Offences Against the Person and case law

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Uploaded on
April 13, 2021
Number of pages
2
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Dr sanjeeb hossain, professor alan norrie and dr laura lammasniemi
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All classes

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21st November 2019

Criminal Law - Lecture 11: Defences

Defences to non-fatal offences against the person:

1. Reasonable chastisement:
- The Children Act 2008 s 58 allows ‘reasonable chastisement’
- Only in England and Northern Ireland, banned in Scotland and shortly in Wales
- Does not apply to wounding, ABH, GBH or child cruelty, only applies to battery
- Must be for the purposes of chastising
- The moment it leaves a mark then it is ABH
- Physical chastisement of children in school has been against the law since 1998

2. Consent:
- You can consent to assault and battery but not to ABH, wounding or GBH
- EG consent does not provide a defence under s 47, 20 and 18 of the OAPA
- There are certain public policy exceptions to this rule such as: medical interventions,
sports, tattooing, horseplay, religious flagellaton
o Surgery and medical intervention:
 Impossible to undertake surgery without wounding
 Even if the outcome isn’t clear, you can consent
 This applied to both essential and non-essential cosmetic treatment
 People under the age of 16 have to assess the capacity of the child –
do they understand the medical procedure and the consequences
before the child can make decisions about their own medical
treatment
o Sports and entertainment:
 Contact sports EG football and rugby
 You’re not consenting to harm but you’re running the risk of being
harmed
 Injuries during sports are not criminalised as long as they come within
the rules of the game (R v Barnes (2004))
o Horseplay:
 Focuses on children so as not to criminalise injuries within
undisciplined play
 ‘Boys will be boys’ (Aitken [1992])
 Street fights are banned
 Not in the public interest to be able to consent to street fights beyond
a “minor struggle”
o Body and aesthetics:
 Tattoo
 Piercing
 Haircut (Smith (2006))
 EG R v BM [2018] WLR 883
 BM tattooist, piercer, and did body modification such as
tongue splitting, removal of the ear and a nipple removal
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