Extradition Treaty with New Zealand


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Extradition Law in New Zealand


Book Description

Extradition Law in New Zealand is a descriptive and analytical statement of the laws and court practices of extradition in New Zealand. It aims to simplify the complex conditions and processes of extradition and balancing of criminal activity and the human rights of the person whose extradition is requested while following a logical progression of extradition proceedings. This is the first text focussed on extradition in a domestic context. It includes in-depth analysis of the Minister of Justice v Kyung Yup Kim [2019] NZSC 100 case and will incorporate the forthcoming Kim Dotcom Supreme Court decision.










Extradition to and from the United States 2010


Book Description

As recently as the early 1970s, the United States typically made and received only 40 requests for international extradition per year. As the world has become “flatter”, there has been a concomitant explosion in transnational criminal activity to which the United States has had to respond. In 2008 alone, 589 people were extradited to it and many others extradited by it. The treatise is designed for prosecutors, defense attorneys, judges and academics. Written by the former Department of Justice official responsible for implementation of United States extradition statutes and treaties as it began designing the mechanisms to cope with the explosion of transnational criminal activity, it analyzes in detail the legal aspects of, and operation under, those statutes and treaties. Additional titles by Michael Abbell include: • International Prisoner Transfer 2010 • Obtaining Evidence Abroad in Criminal Cases 2010 This is the final Edition, there will be no further updates for this series.




Extradition Treaty with Bolivia


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New Zealand External Affairs Review


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