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Suspects in Europe. Procedural Rights at the Investigative Stage of the Criminal Process in the European Union Full Citation Volume 64 Ius Commune Europaeum Series: E. Cape, J. Hodgson, E. Prakke, T. Spronken (eds.), Suspects in Europe. Procedural Rights at the Investigative Stage of the Criminal Process in the European Union (2007, Intersentia, Antwerpen - Oxford, ISBN 90-5095-627-0, xxiii + 280 p.) Cover Note: Knowledge of pre-trial procedural rights across Europe is patchy and the accounts that exist often differ widely from practice. This book provides an insight into the investigative stage of the criminal process and, in particular, the legal protection of persons suspected of crime, in a number of EU countries: Belgium, England and Wales, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands and Poland. For each country, academic and practising lawyers critically examine the pretrial stage of the criminal process and its relationship to the trial stage. In doing so, the authors do not simply describe, in formal terms, criminal procedural rules but, drawing on empirical research and other relevant materials, and on their experience, they seek to explain the lived experience of pre-trial processes in their jurisdictions. Furthermore, given the dynamic nature of criminal justice systems and processes, they examine them in an historical context, demonstrating how they have changed in recent years and speculate on how they might develop in the future. In the second part of the book, the authors consider a case study, explaining how suspects arrested and detained are likely to be dealt with in their jurisdiction. By adopting an approach that seeks to understand the ways in which the legal protection of persons suspected of crime works in practice, this book aims to provide a nuanced understanding of how the investigative stage of the criminal process operates in a variety of EU jurisdictions, and ultimately to contribute to the development of meaningful policies and processes that will help to ensure the realisation of fair trial rights across the EU. This book is essential reading for academics, researchers, students, defence lawyers and policy-makers working in the area of criminal justice in Europe. |
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