ECLA Lecture: 'EU Criminal law round up special: Where are we now with Brexit?'
Duration: 53 mins 17 secs
Share this media item:
Embed this media item:
Embed this media item:
About this item
Description: |
In this lecture, Professor John Spencer (President of the European Criminal Law Association/University of Cambridge) presents a round up of the current situation in European Criminal Law and the potential impacts of Brexit.
The accompanying slides for this event are available at: http://www.eucriminallaw.com/storage/spencer_annual_roundup_2019.pptx The European Criminal Law Association (ECLA UK) (formerly the Association to Combat Fraud in Europe (ACFE)) is an unincorporated association of practitioners, academics and others interested in the emerging body of European Criminal law. It has been associated since 1980, and continues to study, discuss and provide information on the development of the criminal law in Europe by means of seminars, publications and the ECLA website at: http://www.eucriminallaw.com |
---|
Created: | 2019-05-20 15:38 |
---|---|
Collection: |
Faculty of Law general events MOVED
Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law MOVED |
Publisher: | University of Cambridge |
Copyright: | Mr D.J. Bates |
Language: | eng (English) |
Abstract: | Will we really have Brexited, or just had another round of EU elections, or another Referendum aka People’s Vote ? Professor Spencer will be saying nothing until the very last minute…
Professor John Spencer is a Professor of Law (emeritus) at the University of Cambridge, former Director of the Cambridge University Centre for European Legal Studies and President of the UK European Criminal Law Association. He writes and lectures extensively on EU and domestic criminal law and evidence. In 1997 he was part of the team responsible for the Corpus Juris project. He is a QC (honoris causa), an Academic Bencher of the Inner Temple and holds an Honorary Degree from the University of Poitiers. With Alicia Hinarejos and Steve Peers, in 2012 he wrote 'Opting out of EU Criminal law: What is Actually Involved?', published by the University of Cambridge Centre for European Legal Studies (CELS) as a Working Paper, and available online at: https://www.cels.law.cam.ac.uk/publications/working-and-policy-papers |
---|