Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of McMeel on the Construction of Contracts: Interpretation, Implication and Rectification

McMeel on the Construction of Contracts: Interpretation, Implication and Rectification

Price: £225.00

Land Registration Manual
4th ed




 Ash Jones


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Judicial Cooperation in Commercial Litigation 3rd ed (The British Cross-Border Financial Centre World)



 Ian Kawaley, David Doyle, Shade Subair Williams


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


2025-6 Christmas and New Year Closing

We are now closed for the Christmas and New Year period, returning on Monday 5th January 2026. Orders placed during this time will be processed upon our return on 5th January.

Hide this message

Criminalizing Disobedience


ISBN13: 9780197617144
To be Published: May 2026
Publisher: Oxford University Press USA
Country of Publication: USA
Format: Hardback
Price: £88.00





Many laws penalize conduct not because it is inherently wrongful, but because the government has prohibited it. 'Criminalizing Disobedience' examines this important yet underexplored aspect of modern criminal law.

Such "disobedience offenses" include: administration of justice crimes (contempt, obstruction of justice, perjury); failure-to-assist crimes (hindering prosecution, receiving stolen property, money laundering, failures to register or to report); regulatory offenses (involving, for example, environmental, drug, or medical device laws); preventive offenses (attempt, possession of weapons or drugs); and national security offenses (treason, espionage, export control and sanctions violations).

What unifies these otherwise disparate offenses is that their core wrong lies in noncompliance with legal directives - not in unjustifiably harming or endangering others - and the principal reason to refrain from such conduct is simply that the government has said not to do it.

By contrast, laws against, say, murder or rape prohibit conduct that is morally wrongful even in the absence of legal prohibition.

This book addresses the important normative and conceptual questions these laws raise: How should disobedience be understood? Is it blameworthy to disobey the state? In what ways does the state criminalize and punish disobedience? What should be the limits to the state's power to demand obedience and punish disobedience?

Criminalizing Disobedience explores these questions across a range of legal domains and develops a philosophically sophisticated framework for evaluating such laws - one that, in the process, sheds new light on longstanding questions of political obligation, criminalization, and punishment.

It will be of interest to scholars of criminal law, the administrative state, law and philosophy, and political philosophy.