AQA • Law
Latest uploads for Law at AQA. Looking for Law notes at AQA? We have lots of notes, study guides and study notes available for Law at AQA.
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Courses Law at AQA
Notes available for the following courses of Law at AQA
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Unit 1 LAW01 - Law Making and the Legal System
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Unit 2 LAW02 - The Concept of Liability
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Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law (Offences against the Person) or Contract Law
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Unit 4 LAW04 - Criminal Law (Offences against Property) or Tort, and Concepts of Law
Popular books AQA • Law
Jacqueline Martin, Richard Wortley • ISBN 9781510401747
Jacqueline Martin, Nicholas Price • ISBN 9781510401648
Guy Blundell, Emma Bateman • ISBN 9781408519714
Latest content AQA • Law
Section 47 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, commonly known as Actual Bodily Harm (ABH), is the most frequently prosecuted non-fatal offence. The actus reus requires a base offence of either an assault or a battery that results in "actual bodily harm." In the case of R v Miller, ABH was defined as any hurt or injury calculated to interfere with the health or comfort of the victim, provided it is "more than merely transient or trifling." This includes injuries such as exten...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
Section 20 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, known as Malicious Wounding or Inflicting Grievous Bodily Harm (GBH), is a mid-range non-fatal offence. The actus reus requires the defendant to either "wound" the victim (breaking both layers of the skin, often resulting in blood loss) or "inflict" GBH (defined in DPP v Smith as "really serious harm"). Examples include broken bones, permanent disfigurement, or serious psychiatric injury.
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
Section 18 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, often referred to as Wounding or GBH with Intent, is the most serious non-fatal offence in English law. The actus reus is identical to Section 20, requiring either a wound (a break in both layers of the skin, as in Moriarty v Brooks) or Grievous Bodily Harm (defined as "really serious harm" in DPP v Smith). What sets Section 18 apart is its significantly higher mens rea requirement: the prosecution must prove that the defendant had th...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
Theft is a statutory offence defined under Section 1(1) of the Theft Act 1968 as the "dishonest appropriation of property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it." For a conviction to be successful, the prosecution must prove all five elements of the offence. The Actus Reus consists of the appropriation (Section 3), which involves assuming any of the rights of an owner (R v Pitham and Hehl); the property (Section 4), which includes money and all oth...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
Robbery is a statutory offence under Section 8(1) of the Theft Act 1968, famously described as "theft aggravated by force." To secure a conviction, the prosecution must first prove all five elements of a completed theft (appropriation, property, belonging to another, dishonesty, and intention to permanently deprive). The additional actus reus requirements for robbery are that the defendant must use force—or the threat of force—on any person immediately before or at the time of the thef...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
Non-Fatal Offences Against the Person refer to a hierarchy of criminal acts where physical or psychological harm is inflicted on a victim without resulting in death. In English Law, these are primarily governed by the Criminal Justice Act 1988 and the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 (OAPA). The offences are structured in a "ladder" of severity, where both the actus reus (the injury caused) and the mens rea (the level of intent or recklessness) increase at each rung.
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
In English law, Necessity is a controversial and strictly limited common law defence where a defendant argues that they committed a crime to prevent a greater evil from occurring. Unlike self-defence, which is a response to an external threat from a person, necessity usually arises from a choice between two unavoidable harms. For many years, the courts were reluctant to recognize it at all, famously ruling in Re A (Conjoined Twins) that for the defence to succeed, the act must be necessary to av...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
In English law, Murder is a common law offence defined by Lord Coke as the unlawful killing of a reasonable creature in being and under the King's (or Queen's) peace, with malice aforethought. The actus reus requires that the defendant’s conduct was the factual and legal cause of the victim's death. The mens rea, known as malice aforethought, is unique because it can be satisfied by either an express intent to kill or an implied intent to cause grievous bodily harm (GBH) (R v Vickers)...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
In criminal law, Mens Rea (the "guilty mind") refers to the mental element required at the time of the actus reus to establish criminal liability. It ensures that individuals are punished for their intentions or recklessness rather than for mere accidents. The levels of mens rea exist on a hierarchy of culpability: Direct Intent is the highest form, where the prohibited consequence is the defendant's specific objective (R v Mohan), while Oblique Intent applies when a result is a virtual...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law
ross Negligence Manslaughter (GNM) is an involuntary manslaughter offence where a defendant causes death through an extreme level of negligence, despite lacking the specific intent to kill or cause GBH. As established in R v Adomako (1994), the prosecution must prove four key elements: the existence of a duty of care (based on the "neighbor principle" from Donoghue v Stevenson), a breach of that duty which creates a serious and obvious risk of death, and that this breach actually caused th...
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AQA•Unit 3 LAW03 - Criminal Law or Contract Law