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An Introduction to English Legal History. Third Edition. Butterworths. 1990. Chapters 28 and 29. John Hamilton Baker, "Pleas of the Crown" (1978) 94 Selden Society annual volumes 299; J M Kaye et al. "The Making of English Criminal Law" (1977 to 1978) Criminal Law Review; John G Bellamy. Criminal Law and Society in Late Medieval and Tudor England.
History of English law is the history of the legal system and laws of England. Coverage of the history of English law is provided by: Fundamental Laws of England; History of English land law; History of English contract law; History of English criminal law; History of trial by jury in England; History of the courts of England and Wales
English criminal law concerns offences, their prevention and the consequences, in England and Wales. Criminal conduct is considered to be a wrong against the whole of a community, rather than just the private individuals affected.
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The fourth book is his 1,000-page Textbook of Criminal Law (1978). This was a successful student textbook, and would be one still if he had ever managed to finish the third edition, on which he had been labouring for 14 years at the time of his death. In fact, his range as a writer went far beyond the criminal law.
Together with Brian Hogan he was the author of Smith & Hogan's Criminal Law, a leading undergraduate text on English criminal law. The textbook is now in its sixteenth edition (2021) [1] and has been used as persuasive authority on crimes prosecuted in the law courts of England and Wales [2] and elsewhere in the common law world.
In the United Kingdom, Acts of Parliament remain in force until expressly repealed. Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, published in the late 18th-century, raised questions about the system and structure of the common law and the poor drafting and disorder of the existing statute book.