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Dishonesty, Liability and the Law: Exploring the Moral Importance of Context

Edited by: Sotirios Santatzoglou, Martin Wasik, Anthony Wrigley

ISBN13: 9781032726939
To be Published: July 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



In 2017, in Ivey v Genting Casinos, the Supreme Court judged that the dishonesty test is objective and should be the single one in use for any area of law. The judgment sparked some criticism regarding the inflexibility of an objective test. The subsequent 2020 Court of Appeal judgment in R v Barton confirmed the objective test in Ivey. However, little dedicated discussion and analysis of the dishonesty test has subsequently taken place, leaving a growing concern that the one currently in use may not be suitable for determining dishonesty in all contexts. This inter-disciplinary collection challenges the idea of the single objective test by considering the issue of context in defining dishonesty.

The volume is divided into three parts. The first focuses on the analysis of the concept of dishonesty and the dishonesty test, both in relation to context and its impact in determining whether or not liability arises. In the second part, the focus is on contexts of public and private dealings where dishonesty can be the reason to place liability, or where its implications should be modified in order to limit liability. Finally, in the third part, the focus is on the context of healthcare practice and its interface with the conceptual dichotomy of honesty/dishonesty.

The conclusion draws together shared themes, notably the issues of fairness and justice, that arise from the work to demonstrate the definitional vacuum in the law on dishonesty.

The book will be of interest to academics, researchers, policy-makers and regulators working in law, ethics or in areas of professional regulation and misconduct, especially medicine, nursing, student academic misconduct, and politics. Similarly, there will be appeal to those working in relevant professional regulatory areas, such as law, healthcare, and sports governance.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Introduction - Sotirios Santatzoglou, Martin Wasik and Anthony Wrigley

Part A: Dishonesty Test and Context
Chapter.
1 - What is dishonesty and who decides?
Emily Finch
Chapter.
2 - Excuses and the objective approaches to dishonesty: From Ghosh/Hayes to Ivey/Barton with a reference to commercial context considerations
Sotirios Santatzoglou
Chapter.
3 - Theft, Fraud and Dishonesty: A Comparison between English Law and Chinese Law
Bo Wang
Chapter.
4 - How Bad Was That? Some Thoughts on Gauging the Depth of Dishonesty
Martin Wasik

Part B: Dishonesty in Public Life and Private Dealings
Chapter.
5 - Political Dishonesty, Democracy, and the Rationales of the Majority Rule
Yossi Nehushtan and Beatriz Flügel Assad
Chapter.
6 - Dishonesty and Young People’s Liability: The Case of Academic Misconduct
Mark Telford and Rose Tempowski
Chapter.
7 - Dishonest Sporting Governance? Reflections on Amateur Sport, Insurance and Liability
James Brown
Chapter.
8 - Privacy Preserving Lies
Tsachi Keren-Paz

Part C: Dishonesty in the Healthcare Context
Chapter.
9 - Dishonesty, Context, and Virtue Ethics: The Importance of Embedding Moral Theory in the Law of Dishonesty
Anthony Wrigley
Chapter.
10 - Ethical reflections on the Ivey test for dishonesty and its implications for the professional regulation of doctors
Jonathan A. Hughes
Chapter.
11 - Why do Nurses Lie? A version of the truth.
Ruth Westerby
Chapter.
12 - Investigating dishonesty within the maternity and neonatal clinical setting
Sarah Lewis and Joanne Cookson