Constitutional law and english legal system
In: Cracknell's law students' companion, no. 3
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In: Cracknell's law students' companion, no. 3
The black magic is a crime in which the black magic practioner can be regarded as a bandit. In the perspective of religious teachings, to study, to teach, to channelize and to use the services of black magic is a forbidden thing so that it becomes the legal law in the society. Criminal policy of resolving black magic criminality required the panel law to be a mean since the effect of the black magic can make the victim sustain injury and more ironically death. This research entitled criminal policy of black magic management in the positive law of Indonesia. The problem of this research is how the criminal policy of black magic management in the positive law of Indonesia. This research is a normative juridical research, where the data which are used in this research is secondary data; namely books, legislation, documents and other writing related to the problem being researched. Based on the result of the research about criminal policy in managing the black magic is needed to resolve black magic criminality and wide effect which can be caused by the black magic itself both from victim side and the black magic practioner side and from the society's persecuted action by accusing him as a black magic practioner. The criminality of black magic exists in the article of 239 of Criminal Code (KUHP), by way of punishing everybody who claims that he has supernatural power, disclosing, giving hope, and offering services to others.
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In: Social & legal studies: an international journal, Band 3, Heft 1, S. 149-179
ISSN: 1461-7390
In: Brill Book Archive Part 1, ISBN: 9789004472495
In: International and Comparative Criminal Law Series 16
The Prosecution and Defense of Peacekeepers under International Criminal Law is the first comprehensive study on the international judicial implications of prosecution of international peacekeepers and members of military crisis operations under the principles of international criminal law and especially those of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Based on both domestic case law and that of the ICTY-ICTR, this study analyzes the foundation and application of international criminal liability concepts and defenses from the perspective of the prosecution and defense in the area of peacekeeping. This book assesses whether prosecution of international peacekeepers merits a distinct judicial position due to (UN) peacekeeping mandates as well as the concept of Rules of Engagement. Special attention is paid to the new era of international military crisis operations in terms of prosecution and defense of military servicemen involved in these operations. Published under the Transnational Publishers imprint
In: European Law Journal, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 174-200
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In: In: Kostas, E., Leenes, R. & Kamara, I (2022) Research Handbook on EU data protection. Edward Elgar Publishing, 435–454, https://doi.org/10.4337/9781800371682.00026
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In: NTU Law Review 7(2): 343-84
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In: Rechtspolitisches Forum, Band 2
In: Foundations of law in a business society series
In: International review of the Red Cross: humanitarian debate, law, policy, action, Band 94, Heft 887, S. 981-1005
ISSN: 1607-5889
AbstractIn the wake of the mandate of the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General for Business and Human Rights (SRSG), international criminal law looks set to play a role in measures towards the legal accountability of business actors involved in gross human rights and humanitarian law violations. Against the backdrop of the SRSG's now completed mandate, this article looks at three recent developments in international criminal law to consider the field's potential relevance to business actors involved in conflict. The first is the newest mode of liability recently adopted by the International Criminal Court, indirect perpetration through an organisation. The second is the aiding and abetting doctrine as applied by the Special Court for Sierra Leone in theCharles Taylorcase. The third is the potential uptake of a practice of thematic prosecutions focusing on particular under-regulated issues of concern for the international community.
This is the Third Edition of what has become a paragon among criminal interrogation texts. Chapters have been added on interrogator qualification, legal aspects of confessions, the status of lie detection, and selected Supreme Court decisions from 1971 to 1979. The latter which supplements existing chapters on decisions since 1884, including the paramount Miranda and Escobedo decisions-analyzes 147 pertinent judgments. Equally thorough coverage is afforded psychological and technical considerations. The authors deftly blend all three elements - law, psychology; technique -and they explain the
In: The Futures of International Criminal Justice (Routledge, Forthcoming 2021, Chapter 6).
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In: Proceedings of the annual meeting / American Society of International Law, Band 108, S. 107-112
ISSN: 2169-1118
In: APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper
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Working paper
In: Journal of International Criminal Justice (2017)
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