Fatal Injuries in UK Law

  • The Endowment Effect and Expected Utility
    • No. 47-2, May 2000
    • Scottish Journal of Political Economy
    The endowment effect, which is well documented in the contingent valuation literature, alters people’s preferences according to a reference point established in an elicitation question. In particul...
    ... ... economics literature and from a study into the value of non-fatal road injuries are shown to be evidence that an endowment effect is also at ... ...
  • Introduction: Towards Convergence? Disability Policies in Europe
    • No. 2-4, December 2000
    • European Journal of Social Security
    ... ... meant that more people are able to survive illnesses and injuries that would otherwise have been fatal. 1. THREE CHALLENGES TO ... ...
  • Proving non-fatal strangulation in family violence cases: A case study on the criminalisation of family violence
    • No. 25-4, October 2021
    • International Journal of Evidence & Proof, The
    Non-fatal strangulation is recognised as a common form of coercive control in violent relationships. Overwhelmingly it is perpetrated by men against women. It is dangerous both because of the immed...
    ... ... Overwhelmingly it is perpetrated by men against women. It is dangerous both because ofthe immediate and serious injuries it can cause, and the risk of future violence associated withit. A discrete offence of non-fatal strangulation has been introduced in many ... ...
  • Safety Clothing
    • No. 43-8, August 1970
    • Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles
    ... ... the police officer and the motor vehicle serious or even fatal injuries often result. The Reports of the Netherlands Institute ... ...
  • Jennifer Cobbina, Hands Up, Don’t Shoot: Why the Protests in Ferguson and Baltimore Matter and How they Changed America
    • No. 23-1, January 2021
    • Punishment & Society
    ... ... narrative of the Ferguson and Baltimore protests following the fatal police shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown and the death of 25-year- old Freddie Gray’s after sustaining fatal injuries in a police van. Both Brown and Gray were unarmed Black men. Their deaths ... ...
  • 5,500 People Killed Achievement or Challenge?
    • No. 59-2, April 1986
    • Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles
    ... ... back seats of cars - there were over 4,000 serious or fatal injuries to rear seat passengers in 1983; better visibility ... ...
  • Crown Courts
    • No. 37-2, April 1973
    • Journal of Criminal Law, The
    ... ... Racher struck the baby against the side of the cot and caused fatal injuries during her absence. Racher said he tried to revive Melanie ... ...
  • Police Pensions and War Injuries
    • No. 13-4, October 1940
    • Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles
    ... ... motor-car (with trailer-pump attached) being driven at a fast speed to its action station. The constable received fatal injuries. The question for consideration is whether or not the constable in the first case and the constable's widow in the second ... ...
  • Legislation and Road Accidents
    • No. 2-2, September 1938
    • The Modern Law Review
    ... ... that the accompanying rise in deaths and injuries passed almost unnoticed until approximately 1930. By hat time the number of fatal and non-fatal injuries had already reached the colossal figure ... ...
  • Justice is Mocked if an Important Law is Unenforced
    • No. 77-2, April 2013
    • Journal of Criminal Law, The
    ... ... to the death of 45-year-old employee Steven Berry, who suffered fatal injuries when he fell through a fragile roof panel at the fi rm ’ s ... ...
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