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SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES

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  • Book Review

    Book Review: Criminal Law in Myanmar by ChanWing Cheong, Michael Hor,_x000D_ Mark McBride, Neil Morgan and Stanley Yeo, eds

    Citation: [2017] Sing JLS 192
    Criminal Law in Myanmar deserves a far wider audience than its title suggests. The authors propose an ambitious reform of the Penal Code (The Myanmar Code,Volume VIII, Part IX) [Myanmar Penal Code], which is a copy with minor variations of the Penal Code 1860 (Act No 45 of 1860, India) [Indian Penal Code]. Myanmar, Burma as it was then, inherited the Indian Penal Code in 1886 together with the Code of Penal Procedure 1861 (Act No 24 of 1861, India) and the Evidence Act 1872 (Act No 1 of 1872, India). The Indian Penal Code was based on Thomas Macaulay's draft Penal Code of 1837 which, after long delay and revision by the Indian Law Commission, became law in India in 1860. The Indian Penal Code has been retained, its fundamental structure unchanged, in post-colonial Asian nations. The authors' proposals for reform are offered accordingly as a model for renovation of the Penal_x000D_ Codes of India, Malaysia and Singapore as well as Myanmar.
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