Assignment 1 7. What role does voluntariness play in determining whether or not the actus reus has been Research Canadian Criminal Law and Civil Law (20) committed? 8. What would the Crown need to prove to have a person found guilty of being an accessory after DUE DATE the fact? Session 10 9. What is an inchoate offence? 10. Can provocation be used as a defence to an assault? OBJECTIVE INSTRUCTIONS Identify the differences between criminal and civil law Explain the difference between substantive and procedural law Answer the questions above in a Microsoft Word file. Discuss the adversarial nature and structure of the Canadian judicial process Ensure that you include your name and student ID in the document header or on the title page, and Identify and understand the elements of an offence submit the document in .doc, .docx, or .pdf format. Define an inchoate offence Discuss a common law or codified defence available in Canadian Law SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS DESCRIPTION Work must be submitted in the correct file type and be properly labelled as per the College naming convention: Please review and answer the following questions, ensuring to cite (in APA format) any sources [Last name]_[First name]_Assignment _1 appropriately used. Answers may be provided in paragraph or point form as long as the question is fully answered. 1. What are the differences between private law and public law? Of the two, where does criminal law belong? 2. What is procedural law? 3. Identify and explain each of the three basic principles of criminal law. 4. Are the rights and freedoms under the Charter absolute? Explain your answer. 5. What are the advantages and disadvantages of a comprehensive criminal statute in comparison to a collection of different criminal statutes based on specific topics or based primarily on the common law? 6. What do we mean when we say that the justice system in Canada is adversarial