In the law of England and Wales and some other common law jurisdictions, binding over is an exercise of certain powers by the criminal courts used to deal with low-level public order issues. Both magistrates' courts and the Crown Court may issue binding-over orders in certain circumstances.
In a 1988 article in the Cambridge Law Journal, British legal commentator David Feldman describes the power to "bind people over to be of good behaviour or to keep the peace" as a useful and common device used in the criminal justice system of England and Wales, and explains the process as follows:
The origins of the binding-over power are rooted in (1) the takings of sureties of the peace, which "emerged from the peace-keeping arrangements of Anglo-Saxon law, extended by the use of the royal prerogative and royal writs", and (2) the separate device of sureties of good behaviour, which originated as a type of conditional pardon given by the king. The statutory authorization for binding-over powers is found in the Justices of the Peace Act 1361 (34 Edw. 3 c. 1) and s. 1(7) Justices of the Peace Act 1968 (c. 69). Part 11 of Chapter 5 of the Sentencing Act 2020 (c. 17) empowers the criminal courts, when sentencing a person under 18 years for an offence, to "order the parent or guardian to enter into a recognizance to take proper care of the offender and exercise proper control over the offender". Such an order cannot be made against a local authority acting in loco parentis.
Binding-over orders are a feature of the law of Hong Kong.