The typical trial-oriented systems of criminal justice that are primarily based on the strict application of substantive criminal law have reached their functional and logistical limits in most parts of the modern legal world. As a result, new sanction models, less formal, administrative, and discretionary case disposals, plea bargaining arrangements, and other alternative procedural and transitional justice mechanisms have emerged at unprecedented levels in national and international legal orders affiliated both with the civil law and the common law tradition. These normative constructs and practices aim at abbreviating, simplifying, or circumventing the criminal investigation and prosecution. They seek to enhance the effectiveness of conflict resolution proceedings and to shift the focus of crime control from repression to prevention.
The analysis of these topics, which illustrate the general paradigm shift currently taking place in criminal law, exceeds the scope of a single research contribution. For this reason, the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law (Freiburg, Germany), the School of Law of the Queen Mary University London (UK), and the European & International Criminal Law Institute (Athens, Greece) are collaborating on a more in-depth exploration of these issues. As the first publication of this joint research agenda, the present thematically edited volume adopts a general approach on alternative, informal, preventive, and transitional types of criminal justice and the legitimacy of new sanction models in the global risk society. It does so mainly by focusing on distinctive aspects of national, transnational, and international crime control systems as well as on the special regimes of counter-terrorism measures and security law. The common purpose of the studies conducted for this research project is the comparative, model-based, and evaluative (legitimacy-oriented) examination and analysis of the topics at issue.
The researchers involved in this project are experts and internationally acclaimed scholars in this field. Their research results were presented and discussed at an international conference held on 26-27 January 2018 at Middle Temple in London, UK. With all three institutions deeply engaged in the exploration of the formal limits of criminal justice and punishment, this research collaboration is expected to continue with new studies and co-organized international conferences in Freiburg (June 2018), with focus on the prevention, investigation, and sanctioning of economic crime and in Athens (2019), with focus on cybercrime.
2018
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). Reparation Proceedings at the International Criminal Court - A Means to Repair or Recipe for Disappointment? In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). Countering Terrorism: Suspects without Suspicion and (Pre-)Suspects under Surveillance. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
Billis, E., & Knust, N. (2018). Alternative Types of Procedure and the Formal Limits of National Criminal Justice: Aspects of Social Legitimacy. In U. Sieber, , , E. Billis, & N. Knust (Eds.), Alternative systems of crime control: national, transnational, and international dimensions (Vol. S 161, pp. 39–58). Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
Contribution to a Collected edition
, & (2018). Crime-Fighting and Prevention as Competing Approaches to Collective Juvenile Violence - A comparative Study of the United States and France. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
, & (2018). 'It Is Not a Crime to Be on the List, but ...' - Targeted Sanctions and Criminal Law. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). 'Security Law' and Preventive Justice in the Legal Architecture of the European Union. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
Sieber, U. (2018). The New Architecture of Security Law - Crime Control in the Global Risk Society -. In U. Sieber, , , E. Billis, & N. Knust (Eds.), Alternative systems of crime control: national, transnational, and international dimensions (Vol. S 161, pp. 1–35). Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
Contribution to a Collected edition
Sieber, U., , , Billis, E., & Knust, N. (2018). Foreword. In U. Sieber, , , E. Billis, & N. Knust (Eds.), Alternative systems of crime control: national, transnational, and international dimensions (Vol. S 161, pp. V-VI). Berlin: Duncker & Humblot.
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). The Imposition of Penal Sanctions at the Level of the International Criminal Court and Its Relationship to Other Forms of Justice Delivery. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). The US Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and the Erosion of Privacy Protection. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). Legitimacy, Effectiveness, and Alternative Nature of Sanctioning Procedures in the UN Sanctions Committees and within the EU Common Foreign and Security Policy. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). Prevention, Surveillance, and the Transformation of Citizenship in the 'Security Union': The Case of Foreign Terrorist Fighters. In
Contribution to a Collected edition
(2018). Transitional Criminal Justice in Colombia and Complementarity Policy under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. In
2018
Collected Edition
Sieber, U., , , Billis, E., & Knust, N. (Eds.). (2018). Alternative systems of crime control (Vol. S 161) Schriftenreihe des Max-Planck-Instituts für ausländisches und internationales Strafrecht: Strafrechtliche Forschungsberichte. Berlin: Duncker & Humblot. doi:10.30709/978-3-86113-786-3