scholarly journals ¿Favorece a las Mujeres Víctimas la Exención del Deber de Declarar? Estado de la Cuestión en España

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 207-223
Author(s):  
Pilar Martín Ríos

The purpose of this work is to consider whether the exemption from the duty to declare that is contemplated in the Spanish legal system for some cases favors or, on the contrary, harms female victims. To do this, we will start from the hypothesis of committing crimes within family privacy, as it is particularly difficult to prove. We will combine, in our work, a logical-deductive methodology with an empirical-inductive one. The methodological procedures used will consist of a jurisprudential analysis of the most recent and relevant judicial pronouncements, a doctrinal examination of the matter and an analysis, necessary, of the set of current criminal procedural regulations. We will have to expose as results of our investigation how the evidentiary activity is notably complicated when the only witness to the facts invokes his right not to testify due to the aforementioned links. In this way, it is not only really complex to get the process to continue its course, but to allow the accused, in the legitimate exercise of his right to due process, to contradict said testimony.

SAGE Open ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 215824401989407 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Ubillos-Landa ◽  
Alicia Puente-Martínez ◽  
Gina Arias-Rodríguez ◽  
Marcela Gracia-Leiva ◽  
José Luis González-Castro

The effects of armed conflict on women in post-conflict situations are an area of analysis for social disciplines. This study will analyze the situation in Colombia, currently involved in a peace restoration process. The aim is to verify the efficacy of a coping and emotion regulation program analyzing victimization as well as the coping strategies employed in response to these violent acts. The program focuses on 62 women contacted through the Ruta Pacífica de las Mujeres, a nongovernmental organization. The program had a positive effect on women, reporting lower levels of posttraumatic stress, more functional coping strategies, and less use of dysfunctional strategies. All emotional cognitive and social indicators improved. Women felt emotionally better, perceiving greater social support and more trust in institutions. Survivors had more self-confidence to achieve their goals and solve their problems. The implications in a context of peace reconstruction and search for social cohesion are discussed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 115
Author(s):  
Delia Sánchez Castillo

The purpose of this article is to understand how asset freezing works in the United States of America and in Mexico, as well as the contrasts and similarities in both systems. The threats posed to civil rights that can arise from asset freezing led us to compare the judicial criteria held by the US Courts and the corresponding reasoning in the Mexican legal system. Alternative rulings from European courts are also considered. Finally, some recommendations are made to improve due process in the Mexican legal system after preventing money laundering and funding terrorism when freezing financial assets.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 171-185
Author(s):  
Carlos Augusto de Sousa

Brazilian Federal Military Justice has received criticism, especially with regard to the jurisdiction to try civilians in peacetime. However, this judgment protects the interests of the military and rests on the most current positivity. There is no incompatibility between the Constitution and the rule established by Article 9 of the Military Criminal Code. The competence therein derives from the legislature’s intention that used the original ratione legis and also the ratione personae criteria to fix it. On the other hand, the doctrine and the Supreme Court understand that the protection of the interests of the Armed Forces are not restricted to the hierarchy and discipline, recognizing the competence of military courts to try civilians, also in the light of its peculiarity. It is important to emphasize the Brazilian Federal Military Justice is neither a martial court nor an administrative tribunal, but a branch of the Judiciary Power. Its guiding principles are in line with the human rights enshrined in the Brazilian legal system and the American Convention on Human Rights. Under the auspices of the adversarial system, the trial of civilians by federal military court does not violate the guarantee of due process, since every process started respects the superior constitutional principles.


2007 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
pp. 441-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liz Campbell

Various alterations to the Irish legal system have been effected in a bid to counter organised crime, the most radical of which was the introduction of civil forfeiture in 1996. This article examines the forfeiture process carried out by the Criminal Assets Bureau and seeks to analyse it from a theoretical perspective. Civil forfeiture may be regarded as embodying a move away from due process towards crime control, given the avoidance of traditional protections in the criminal process by its location in the civil realm. Moreover, the process may be characterised as an ‘apersonal means of tackling crime’, in which emphasis is laid on the non-moral and regulatory aspects of the law. This article further contends that civil forfeiture represents an adaptation to reality in which the State reconfigures the legislative framework so as to facilitate more readily the suppression of organised crime.


Author(s):  
Dean J. Kotlowski

Nicholas Rush Smith’s chapter explores collective violence in postapartheid South Africa, where vigilante violence involving an attempt to necklace alleged criminals has been common. That the necklace--placing a gasoline filled tire around the neck of a victim and setting it alight--is frequently deployed is surprising, Smith asserts, because the struggle against apartheid was, in important ways, a struggle for a procedural rights-based legal system, something necklacing undermines. Moreover, necklacing was originally developed as a tool to sanction political threats under apartheid, whereas today it is primarily used as a technique to punish criminals. Why, Smith asks, is necklacing still practiced twenty years after the dawn of democracy given that it was first implemented as part of the struggle against apartheid? Smith’s chapter argues that citizens deploying the necklace challenge the postapartheid state’s-rights-based legal system, which South Africans often argue enables insecurity and immorality, to proliferate; rhetorically and ideologically, this in some ways parallels the criticisms that American lynchers often made of procedural, due process rights. Through its spectacular violence, the necklace dramatizes these critiques of the democratic legal order much like it dramatized critiques of the apartheid state.


Author(s):  
Nigel Stobbs

Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) is a multidisciplinary approach to assessing the impact of the law itself on the emotional and psychological experiences of all those who have contact with the legal system. Variously described as a theory, a method, a lens, or a process of analysis, its distinguishing feature is to conceive of the law as a “therapeutic agent.” That agency can cause both therapeutic and antitherapeutic consequences. By investigating and assessing the social, professional, and political contexts in which laws are made and applied, TJ seeks to identify how unintentional harms are caused and suggests ways to remedy them. It also identifies opportunities to enhance psychological strengths and positive emotional experiences to improve legal outcomes. It has commonalities with positive criminology, restorative justice, procedural justice, and other less adversarial approaches within the criminal justice system. Since being founded by David Wexler and Bruce Winick in the 1980s as a project to improve the experiences of those subjected to mental disability law in the United States, the theory and methodology of TJ has evolved, and its influence has expanded to virtually every major legal system and jurisdiction. TJ was at the core of the operating philosophy of the problem-solving court movement, which now operates across nine countries. It is increasingly influential in new approaches to probation and offender treatment models in the United States, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, and in influencing access to justice policies in India and Pakistan. It offers some common conceptual principles for the development of First Nations courts, tribunals, and dispute resolution programs seeking to eradicate systemic, monocultural bias in postcolonial criminal justice systems which tend to lead to intractable, carceral overrepresentation. TJ is currently undergoing a process of “mainstreaming” across disciplines and internationally. This involves encouraging lawyers and other criminal justice workers outside specialist court and diversion jurisdictions to adopt therapeutic outlooks and practices. So far there have been projects to mainstream TJ principles in police interviewing, risk assessment, diversion, criminal settlement conferences, bail, sentencing, conditional release from custody, and appeals. The sorts of reforms, innovations, and changes in mindsets suggested by TJ work has also sparked resistance and criticism. The latter ranges from constructive concerns about conceptual vagueness, risks of paternalism, and coercion to absolute ideological opposition on the grounds that TJ allegedly advocates for the complete abandonment of the adversarial system and strongarms defendants into surrendering their constitutional and due process rights.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mai Van Thang

Abstract: This article explains the reasons for the lack of popularity of the term "due process of law" in the Russian current legal system. Nevertheless, all fundamental aspects of this principle included perception, core issues, and requirements that have been shown in a relatively complete and comprehensive way under another name with various levels, forms of expression, and its compliance. By Russia's case study, the author affirms that due process of law is necessary not only in the procedure proceedings that take place before the judicial decisions are made but also in the implementation of decisions and judgments given by courts and other entities. Above all, due process of law would maximize its efficiency when it is nourished in the right ecosystem.


2012 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 165-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisangela Argenta Zanatta ◽  
Daiane Dal Pai ◽  
Darielli Gindri Resta ◽  
Carla Argenta ◽  
Maria da Graça Corso Da Motta

Caracterizar a violência notificada no Rio Grande do Sul contra adolescentes na faixa etária dos 10 aos 19 anos, segundo dados do Centro Estadual de Vigilância em Saúde, no período entre 2009 e 2010. Método: Estudo epidemiológico-descritivo e transversal de dados secundários. Resultados: Foram notificados 337 casos em 2009 e 1559 em 2010, prevalecendo vítimas do sexo feminino. Na faixa etária de 10 a 14 anos, o pai, a mãe e o padrasto foram, respectivamente, os principais perpetradores, enquanto que, entre os 15 e 19 anos foram os parceiros amorosos. Conclusão: Deve-se investir na proteção aos adolescentes e no estímulo à notificação.Descritores: Adolescente, Violência, Notificação de Abuso.Characterization of reports of violence against adolescentsTo characterize the violence reported in Rio Grande do Sul against adolescents from 10 to 19 years old, according to the State Center for Health Surveillance in the period between 2009 and 2010. Method: It is an epidemiological and descriptive study and cross-sectional secondary data. Results: 337 cases were reported in 2009 and 1559 in 2010, prevailing female victims. At the age from 10 to 14 years old, the father, mother and stepfather were, respectively, the main perpetrators, while the range from 15 to 19 years old increases the violence originated by loving partners. Conclusion: One should invest in adolescents’ protection and to stimulate notification.Descriptors: Adolescents, Violence, Abuse Reporting.Caracterización de las denuncias de violencia contra los adolescentesCaracterizar la violencia reportada en el Rio Grande do Sul contra adolescentes con edades entre 10 y 19 años, según dados del Centro Estatal de Vigilancia en Salud en el período entre 2009 y 2010. Método: Estudio epidemiológico-descriptivo y transversal de dados secundarios. Resultados: Fueron reportados 337 en 2009 y 1559 en 2010, imponiéndose a las mujeres víctimas. En el grupo de edad de 10 a 14 años el padre, la madre y el padrastro fueron, respectivamente, los principales perpetradores, mientras en el grupo de los 15 a los 19 años aumentan las violencias originadas por las parejas amorosas. Conclusión: Hay que invertir en la protección de los adolescentes y para estimular la notificación.Descriptores: Adolescente, Violencia, Notificación de Abusos.


Author(s):  
Eliane Regina Francisco da Silva ◽  
Rosangela Aparecida de Medeiros Hespanhol

THE WOMEN IN THE PROGRAM OF FOOD ACQUISITION (PAA) IN THE MUNICIPALITIES OF MIRANTE DO PARANAPANEMA AND ROSANA (SP)LAS MUJERES EN EL PROGRAMA DE ADQUISICIÓN DE ALIMENTOS (PAA) EN LOS MUNICIPIOS DE MIRANTE DEL PARANAPANEMA Y ROSANA (SP)RESUMOO objetivo deste artigo é analisar a participação das mulheres no Programa de Aquisição de Alimentos (PAA) nos municípios de Mirante do Paranapanema e Rosana (SP). Buscamos expor algumas características dos municípios em questão e, em especial, de que forma o programa tem contribuído para a conquista da autonomia das agricultoras familiares. Os procedimentos metodológicos utilizados foram a pesquisa de campo durante os meses de março e abril de 2016 nos municípios selecionados e o levantamento bibliográfico. Os resultados obtidos mostraram que o PAA tem contribuído para a autonomia socioeconômica das mulheres e para a valorização e visibilidade do trabalho destas na escala nacional.Palavras-chave: PAA; Mulheres na Agricultura; Municípios de Mirante do Paranapanema e Rosana (SP).ABSTRACTThe objective of this article is to analyze the participation of women in the Food Acquisition Program (PAA) in the municipalities of Mirante do Paranapanema and Rosana (SP). We seek to outline some characteristics of the municipalities in question and, in particular, how the program has contributed to the achievement of the autonomy of family farmers. The methodological procedures used were the field research during the months of March and April of 2016 in the selected municipalities and the bibliographic survey. The results showed that the PAA has contributed to the socioeconomic autonomy of women and to the valorization and visibility of their work.Keywords: PAA; Women in Agriculture; Municipalities of Mirante do Paranapanema and Rosana (SP).RESUMENEl objetivo de este artículo es analizar la participación de las mujeres en el Programa de Adquisición de Alimentos (PAA) en los municipios de Mirante do Paranapanema y Rosana (SP). Buscamos exponer algunas características de los municipios en cuestión y, en especial de qué forma el programa ha contribuido a la conquista de la autonomía de las agricultoras familiares. Los procedimientos metodológicos utilizados fueron la investigación de campo durante los meses de marzo y abril de 2016 en los municipios seleccionados y el levantamiento bibliográfico. Los resultados obtenidos mostraron que el PAA ha contribuido a la autonomía socioeconómica de las mujeres ya la valorización y visibilidad del trabajo de éstas.Palabras clave: PAA; Mujeres en la Agricultura; Municipios de Mirante do Paranapanema y Rosana (SP).


1974 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Stoddart Flemion

For a half-century, historians, accepting an interpretation put forward by Francis Relf in the introduction to the Camden Society's publication of several of the scribbled books of Henry Elsing, clerk of the parliament in the 1620s, have viewed the revival of judicature in parliament in 1621 from the distorted framework of the struggle for supremacy between the two great systems of law in England. An explanation more consistent with all of the evidence surrounding this event - which brought with it the most significant constitutional develop ment in the house of lords since the middle ages - lies in the connection between slow process and due process in English justice. Professor William Jones singled out slow justice in the courts as the central judicial problem of the age and observed that it defeated both the great equity jurist, Lord Chancellor Ellesmere, and his equally famous counterpart, Chief Justice Sir Edward Coke, since ‘neither man could think of a remedy which would restrain litigants and yet leave their legally justified rights untarnished’. The revival of judicature in the house of lords in 1621, most especially in its appellate civil aspects, was part of the most ambitious attempt to solve this dilemma in the early seventeenth century. While it failed in its immediate goal and slow justice remained the nemesis of due process in the English legal system, the experiment begun in 1621 permanently altered the constitutional framework of England by establishing the house of lords once again as the high court of parliament.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document