Solo authored books:
1. Dennis J. Baker, Reinterpreting Criminal Complicity and Inchoate Participation Offences, (London: Routledge, 2016) 340 pages.
2. Dennis J. Baker, Glanville Williams: Textbook of Criminal Law, (London: 4th edn., Sweet & Maxwell, 2015) (1720 pages).
3. Dennis J. Baker, The Right Not to be Criminalized: Demarcating Criminal Law’s Authority, (London: Ashgate Applied Legal Philosophy Series, 2011 (ISBN 978-1-4094-2765-0.)). (308-pages). (Now in paperback as well as hardback with a Chinese translated edition coming out in 2018 with Peking University Press.) (Reviewed by Professor Harding in the Cambrian Law Review, (2011) Vol. 42, pp. 167-184.
4. Dennis J. Baker, Glanville Williams: Textbook of Criminal Law, (London: 3rd edn., Sweet & Maxwell, 2012 (ISBN: 9780414046139). (1504-pages). (Reviewed by Michael Jefferson, in Criminal Law Review, 2014, 2, 165-167).
Edited book:
5. Dennis J. Baker & Jeremy Horder (editors) The Sanctity of Life and the Criminal Law, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013 (ISBN: 9781107020474). Approx. 358 pages). Reviewed by Professor G.R. Sullivan: See G. R. Sullivan, “Professing the Criminal Law,” (2014) 12 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 267-286 (16 pages)
Journal Articles United States:
Dennis J. Baker, “Conceptualizing Inchoate Complicity: The Normative and Doctrinal Case for Lessor Offenses as an Alternative to Complicity Liability,” (2016) 25(1) Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal 504-588.
Dennis J. Baker, “Reinterpreting the Mental Element in Criminal Complicity: Change of Normative Position Theory Cannot Rationalize the Current Law,” (2016) 40 Law & Psychology Review 121-296.
Dennis J. Baker, “Mutual Combat Complicity, Transferred Intention/Defences and the Exempt Party Defence,” (2016) 37 University of La Verne Law Review 205-284.
Dennis J. Baker, “Should Unnecessary Harmful Nontherapeutic Cosmetic Surgery be Criminalised?” (2014) 17(4) New Criminal Law Review 587-630.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘The Moral Limits of Criminalizing Remote Harms,’ (2007) 10(3) Buffalo Criminal Law Review 371-391.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘Constitutionalizing the Harm Principle,’ (2008) 27(2) Criminal Justice Ethics 3-28.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘Collective Criminalization and the Constitutional Right to Endanger Others,’ (2009) 28(2) Criminal Justice Ethics 168-200.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘The Moral Limits of Consent as a Defence in the Criminal Law,’ (2009) 12(1) Buffalo Criminal Law Review 93-121.
Dennis J. Baker, “Complicity, Proportionality and the Serious Crime Act” (2011) 14(3) Buffalo Criminal Law Review 403-426.
Dennis J. Baker & Lucy X. Zhao, “The Normativity of Using Prison to Control Hate Speech: The Hollowness of Waldron’s Harm Theory,” (2013) 16(4) New Criminal Law Review 621-656.
Dennis J. Baker & Lucy X. Zhao, “Responsibility Links, Fair Labelling and Proportionality in China: Comparing China’s Criminal Law Theory and Doctrine,” (2009) 14(2) UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 274-334.
Journal Articles Canada:
Dennis J. Baker, “The Impossibility of a Critically Objective Criminal Law,” (2011) 56(2) McGill L. J. 349-394. Journal Articles Hong Kong Dennis J. Baker, “The Doctrinal and Normative Vacuity of Hong Kong’s Joint Enterprise Doctrine,” [2017] Hong Kong Law Journal (forthcoming). Journal Articles Australia:
Dennis J. Baker, ‘The Harm Principle vs. Kantian Criteria for Ensuring Fair, Principled and Just Criminalisation,’ (2008) 33 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 66-99.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘Punishment Without A Crime: Is Preventive Detention Reconcilable with Justice?’ (2009) 34 Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 120-150.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘Rethinking Consensual Harm Doing,’ (2008) 12 UWS Law Review 21-39. Journal Articles Singapore:
Dennis J. Baker, ‘The Sense and Nonsense of Criminalising Transfers of Obscene Materials,’ (2008) 26 Singapore Law Review 126-155.
Journal Articles in China:
Dennis J. Baker, “The Doctrinal and Normative Vacuity of Hong Kong’s Joint Enterprise Doctrine,” [2017] Hong Kong Law Journal
Dennis J. Baker, 责任关系、罪刑相应及相当性原则——中国刑法理论与原则之比较研究
The Concept of Cybercrime: Applying The General Part to Limit Offending via Cyber Means (2018) Internet Journal 1.
Journal Articles United Kingdom:
Dennis J. Baker, “Jogee: Jury Directions and the Manslaughter Alternative” [2017] Criminal Law Review 33.
Dennis J. Baker, “Unlawfulness’s Doctrinal and Normative Irrelevance to Complicity Liability: A Reply to Simester,” (2017) 81(4) J Crim. L. (forthcoming).
Dennis J. Baker, “Lesser Included Offences, Alternative Offences and Accessorial Liability” (2016) 80(3) Journal of Criminal Law 1)
Dennis J. Baker, “Liability for Encouraging One’s Own Murder, Victims and Other Exempt Parties,” (2012) 23(3) King’s Law Journal 257–285.
Dennis J. Baker, ‘A Critical Evaluation of the Historical and Contemporary Justifications for Criminalising Begging,’ (2009) 73(3) Journal of Criminal Law 212-240.
Dennis J. Baker, “Omissions Liability for Homicide Offences: Reconciling R. v. Kennedy (No. 2) with R. v. Evans,” (2010) 74(4) Journal of Criminal Law 310-320.
Dennis J. Baker & Lucy X. Zhao, ‘Contributory Qualifying and Non-Qualifying Triggers in the Loss of Control Defence: A Wrong Turn on Sexual Infidelity,’ (2012) 76 Journal of Criminal Law 254-275.
Dennis J. Baker & Lucy X. Zhao, ‘The Criminality of Fines Imposed by Private Car Park Companies,’ (2012) 176 Justice of the Peace Journal 297.