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A 'zone of legal exemption' for sports violence? : Form and substance in the criminal law.

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Livings, Ben (2016) A 'zone of legal exemption' for sports violence? : Form and substance in the criminal law. PhD thesis, University of Warwick.

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Official URL: http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b3067982~S15

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Abstract

This study examines the criminal liability that may be incurred by participants in contact sports for violence that results in injury to a fellow participant. For these purposes, I concentrate on boxing, rugby and soccer; sports that involve a level of physicality that risks, and regularly causes, injury. The violence that is intrinsic to their practice is in some senses archetypically criminal, and yet, that self-same violence is also constitutive of sports that are perceived to have enormous personal, social and cultural value, and which have been declared by the House of Lords to amount to ‘lawful activities’.

A formal account of the criminal law of sports violence posits the consent of the participants as the primary determinant of the imposition of liability for acts of violence committed during the course of contact sports. In this thesis, I examine this formal account and propose that the substance of the lawfulness of sports violence needs to be understood in terms of its socio-historical development, and the sophisticated rule-systems and pluralistic regulatory backdrop against which modern sports operate.

This thesis contributes a new understanding of the offences that pertain to sports violence, and the normative role and doctrinal function of the participants’ consent, in order to understand the way in which the criminal law accommodates violent sports practices. The thesis also suggests new ideas in relation to the ‘playing culture’ of sport and its relationship to the criminal law, and the role of prosecutorial discretion in effectively shaping the lawfulness of ‘legitimate sport’.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Subjects: K Law [LC] > K Law (General)
Library of Congress Subject Headings (LCSH): Violence in sports -- Law and legislation, Sports -- Law and legislation, Criminal liability, Criminal intent
Official Date: October 2016
Dates:
DateEvent
October 2016Submitted
Institution: University of Warwick
Theses Department: School of Law
Thesis Type: PhD
Publication Status: Unpublished
Supervisor(s)/Advisor: Norrie, Alan W. (Alan William), 1953-
Format of File: pdf
Extent: xiii, 335 leaves
Language: eng

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