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引用次数: 0
摘要
《2023年经济犯罪和企业透明度法案》(Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023)以可喜的方式扩大了身份认定原则,但我认为,这还远远不够。具体来说,我认为,该法案的改革没有充分应对高级管理人员的威胁,这些高级管理人员干涉公司内部信息的正常流动,策划他人有害或危险的做法,同时试图通过阻止任何个人构成任何经济犯罪的全部犯罪目的来逃避责任。刑法应如何应对这一差距?我认为,进一步扩大个人责任的回应将是有问题的——比如,扩大2007年《严重犯罪法》中已经“令人不安地广泛”的早期罪行。相反,集体知识学说为这些场景提供了量身定制的解决方案。这一原则将允许法院(在狭窄的情况下)汇总公司内部个人的精神状态,以构建一个独特的公司行为准则。我认为,2023年法案的第196条扩展了身份认定原则,可以理解为包含了集体知识原则的狭义版本——至少如果法院愿意采取旨在实现议会更广泛目标的目的主义取向的话。集体知识原则的限制版本将具有规范性利益,因此,我认为,值得通过测试诉讼将其提交法院。
Collective Knowledge and the Limits of the Expanded Identification Doctrine.
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 expanded the identification doctrine in welcome ways, but, I argue, does not go far enough. Specifically, I contend that the Act's reforms do not sufficiently respond to the threat of senior managers who culpably interfere in the proper flow of information within the company to orchestrate harmful or risky practices by others, all while seeking to avoid liability by preventing any individual from forming the full mens rea of any economic crime. How should the criminal law respond to this gap? I argue it would be problematic to respond by extending individual liability even further-say, by expanding the already 'disturbingly wide' inchoate offences in the Serious Crime Act 2007. Instead, the collective knowledge doctrine provides a tailor-made solution to these scenarios. This doctrine would permit courts (in narrow circumstances) to aggregate individuals' mental states within the company to construct a distinct corporate mens rea. I argue that section 196 of the 2023 Act, which expands the identification doctrine, could be read to incorporate a narrow version of the collective knowledge doctrine-at least if courts are willing to adopt a purposivist orientation aimed at giving effect to the wider aims of Parliament. A restricted version of the collective knowledge doctrine would have normative benefits and so, I suggest, is worth putting to the courts through test litigation.
期刊介绍:
The Oxford Journal of Legal Studies is published on behalf of the Faculty of Law in the University of Oxford. It is designed to encourage interest in all matters relating to law, with an emphasis on matters of theory and on broad issues arising from the relationship of law to other disciplines. No topic of legal interest is excluded from consideration. In addition to traditional questions of legal interest, the following are all within the purview of the journal: comparative and international law, the law of the European Community, legal history and philosophy, and interdisciplinary material in areas of relevance.