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Índice Artículos Sanción penal, prevención y reforma penal venezolana. Criminal sanctions, prevention and criminal reform in Venezuela. Sanction pénale, prévention et réforme pénale vénézuélienne. Sanção penal, prevenção e reforma penal venezuelana. Bolaños González, Mireya La flagrancia en los delitos permanentes y los delitos de ejecución instantánea y efectos permanentes. Flagrancy in ongoing crimes and in criminal events with permanent effects. La flagrance dans les délits permanents et les délits de consommation instantanée et d'effets permanents. A flagrância em delitos permanentes e os delitos de consumação instantânea e efeitos permanentes. ; 11-26 ; mireyabo@ula.ve ; anual ; Nivel analítico
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In: International law reports, Band 70, S. 102-109
ISSN: 2633-707X
Jurisdiction — In general — Personal — Over nationals in respect of crimes committed abroad — Power to legislate with extraterritorial effect — Criminal Law Gurisdiction) Bill 1975 — The law of Ireland
Jurisdiction — In general — Territorial — Territorial limits of jurisdiction — Whether a State has power to legislate with extraterritorial effect — Protective principle — Jurisdiction over nationals abroad — Criminal Law (Jurisdiction) Bill 1975 — The law of Ireland
In: Texas international law journal, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 239
ISSN: 0163-7479
In: Texas international law journal, Band 36, Heft 2, S. 237-238
ISSN: 0163-7479
In: Series on transitional justice volume 18
This volume considers the important and timely question of criminal justice as a method of addressing state violence committed by non-democratic regimes. The book's main objectives concern a fresh, contemporary, and critical analysis of transitional criminal justice as a concept and its related measures, beginning with the initiatives that have been put in place with the fall of the Communist regimes in Europe in 1989.The project argues for rethinking and revisiting filters that scholars use to interpret main issues of transitional criminal justice, such as: the relationship between judicial accountability, democratisation and politics in transitional societies; the role of successor trials in rewriting history; the interaction between domestic and international actors and specific initiatives in shaping transitional justice; and the paradox of time in enhancing accountability for human rights violations. In order to accomplish this, the volume considers cases of domestic accountability in the post-1989 era, from different geographical areas, such as Europe, Asia and Africa, in relation to key events from various periods of time. In this way the approach, which investigates space and time-lines in key examples, also takes into account a longitudinal study of transitional criminal justice itself. About the book'Transitional justice nowadays is an industry which produces hundreds of texts each year and it is difficult to turn our attention to an intellectual product. This book is well-balanced and will find recognition in readers and students of transitional justice, as well as researchers on social transformation. It is a collection in the best tradition of socio-legal research. The book is recommended for two reasons: its serious treatment of criminal justice as a part of transitional justice, and its approach, which locates the problem of transitional justice in post-communist Europe in a broader, comparative context.' Prof. Dr. Adam Czarnota, Scientific Director of the International Institute for the Sociology of Law, Oati, Spain'By carefully considering how criminal justice relates to democratization, collective memory, internationalist concerns, and the passage of time since violations occurred, this volume contributes importantly to the evolving transitional justice literature. The questions it raises are timely and theoretically grounded, and the choice of cases diverse and illuminating. Its authors richly contextualize their examinations, complemen ...
In: Sports Law: Cases and Materials (9th ed.), 2020
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In: American journal of international law, Band 94, Heft 2, S. 391-395
ISSN: 0002-9300
In: American journal of international law, Band 95, Heft 1, S. 7-31
ISSN: 0002-9300
World Affairs Online
In the national development the role of land for the fulfillment of various purposes will increase, either as a place to live or for business activities. In relation to that will also increase the need for support in the form of guarantee of legal certainty in the field of land. The result of the research is the conception of the state of Indonesia is a state law, which contains the meaning in the administration of government and the state based on the law, the protection of the law is a universal concept of the rule of law. The legal certainty on land rights as intended by the UUPA encompasses three things, namely the certainty of the object of land rights, certainty on the subject of land rights and certainty about the status of landrights. Legal conception of land title certificate is a proof that issued by authorized legal institution, containing juridical data and physical data which isused as evidence of ownership of land rights in order to provide assurance of legal certainty and certainty of rights to a plot of land owned or possessed by a person or legal entity. With the certificate of rights, it is expected that the juridical can guarantee the legal certainty and the right by the state for the holder of the right to the land. This country's guarantee is granted to the owner or the holder of the certificate may be granted because the land is already registered in the state land administration system.
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In: Feminist Legal Studies
Abstract This article explores the challenge of developing a feminist law reform proposal to decertify sex and gender based on research conducted for the 'Future of Legal Gender' project. Locating the proposal to decertify within a do-it-yourself, prefigurative approach to law reform, the article asks: Can a law reform proposal be both instrumental and radical? Can a proposal take shape as a viable legislative text and as a more subversive intervention to unsettle and reimagine gender's relationship to law? This article explores this at two levels. First, it considers the ontological challenges of developing a controversial law reform proposal in terms of its realness (or fictiveness), contours, and temporality, turning to 'slow law' as a credible way of approaching radical reform. Second, it explores the design-based challenges of legal prototyping—foregrounding questions of legitimacy, participation, and purpose, which arise in designing a decertification law. At the heart of this discussion is the relationship between representation and enactment—between what a proposal presents and what its presentation does and does not accomplish.
In: The Denver journal of international law and policy, Band 24, S. 221-228
ISSN: 0196-2035
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In: Soviet Law and Government, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 33-42
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