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  1. Consent: Making the difference between pleasure and crime Contribution
    Weigend, Thomas (2024)
    In: Caletti, Gian; Summerer, Kolis (Eds.), Criminalizing intimate image abuse. A comparative perspective, Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 259-276
  2. Legal protection of revenge and deepfake porn victims in the European Union: Findings from a comparative legal study Journal Article
    Mania, Karolina (2024)
    In: Trauma, violence & abuse, 25(1), pp. 117-129
  3. Reform needs in German criminal law on sexual offenses: The non-compromise of “no-means-no” Contribution
    Gmelin, Lena ; Wörner, Hannah (2023)
    In: Erbaş, Rahime (Eds.), European perspectives on attrition in sexual offenses, Lexington Books, Lanham
  4. The new German law on sexual assault Contribution
    Hörnle, Tatjana (2023)
    In: Hörnle, Tatjana (Eds.), Sexual assault. Law reform in a comparative perspective, Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 141-162
  5. Consent in criminal law Contribution
    Gur-Arye, Miriam (2023)
    In: Husa, Jaakko; Smits, Jan; Valcke, Catherine (Eds.), Elgar Encyclopedia of comparative law, Edward Elgar Publishing, Cheltenham
  6. Germany Contribution
    Weigend, Thomas (2022)
    In: Hoven, Elisa; Weigend, Thomas (Eds.), Consent and sexual offenses, Nomos, Baden-Baden, pp. 183-196
  7. Causation and responsibility for outcomes Contribution
    Walen, Alec ; Weisser, Bettina (2022)
    In: Ambos, Kai; Duff, Antony; Heinze, Alexander; Roberts, Julian; Weigend, Thomas (Eds.), Core concepts in criminal law and criminal justice, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 57-94
  8. Evaluating #MeToo: the perspective of criminal law theory Journal Article
    Hörnle, Tatjana (2021)
    In: German Law Journal, 22(5), pp. 833-846
  9. Balancing sexual autonomy, responsibility, and the right to privacy: principles for criminalizing sex by deception Journal Article
    Scheidegger, Nora (2021)
    In: German Law Journal, 22(5), pp. 769-783
  10. “Progressive” criminalization? A sociological and criminological analysis based on the German “no means no” provision Journal Article
    Kölbel, Ralf (2021)
    In: German Law Journal, 22(5), pp. 817-832
  11. Omissions Contribution
    Ambos, Kai (2020)
    In: Ambos, Kai; Duff, Antony; Heinze, Alexander; Roberts, Julian; Weigend, Thomas (Eds.), Core concepts in criminal law and criminal justice, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 17-53
  12. Protecting the right to sexual self-determination: Models of regulation and current challenges in European and German sex crime laws Contribution
    Brodowski, Dominik (2017)
    In: Saad-Diniz, Eduardo (Eds.), O lugar da vítima nas ciências criminais, LiberArs, São Paulo, pp. 15-25
  13. A special offence of intoxication for English law: A comparative perspective Journal Article
    Mohr, Angelika (2015)
    In: Anglo-German Law Journal, pp. 95-135
  14. The fault element in the history of German criminal theory: with some general conclusions for the rules of imputation in a legal system Journal Article
    Toepel, Friedrich (2012)
    In: Criminal Law and Philosophy, 6(2), pp. 167-186
  15. Criminal police and criminal law in the Rechtsstaat Contribution
    Dubber, Markus D. (2008)
    In: Dubber, Markus; Valverde, Mariana (Eds.), Police and the liberal state, Stanford University Press, Stanford, pp. 92-109