CRM 1300 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Youth Criminal Justice Act, English Criminal Law, Canada Act 1982

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Norms are established rules of behaviour or standards of conduct. A norm becomes a law when informal rules can no longer be maintained or when behaviour is too serious to be left to informal mechanisms. A rule is written and it is specified whether or not it is legal or illegal. This states that laws represent the agreement of most people in society that certain acts should be prohibited by the criminal law. Most everyone believes a certain act is wrong. Consensus theorists believe that law is simply a codification of the values shared by most members of society. A value is a collective idea about what is right or wrong, good or bad, and desirable or undesirable in a particular culture. It does not agree that laws reflect a consensus of members of society. Theorists maintain that laws are passed by the privileged (ruling class) in order to keep they power.

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