- •Внеаудиторное чтение: сборник текстов для студентов юридических специальностей (english, deutsch, français)
- •Contents
- •Preface
- •Part 1 english law
- •England and wales as a distinct jurisdiction
- •Overseas influences
- •Common law in the uk
- •Law reports
- •The court system civil courts
- •Criminal courts
- •The training of judges
- •Civil courts: sentencing and court orders
- •Civil law and common law
- •The main branches of civil and common law
- •Information technology law and cybercrime computer security
- •Cybercrime
- •Data protection
- •Environmental law
- •National environmental law
- •Court systems
- •England and wales the house of lords
- •The court of appeal
- •The high court of justice
- •The crown court
- •County court
- •Magistrates’ court
- •Tribunal d’instance
- •Tribunal de grande instance
- •Courts of special jurisdiction tribunal de commerce (commercial court)
- •Conseil de prud’hommes (labour court)
- •Tribunal des affaires de securite sociale (social security court)
- •Cour d’appel
- •Cour de cassation
- •Germany
- •Amtsgericht (local court)
- •Landgericht (district court)
- •Oberlandesgericht (appeal court)
- •The bundesgerichtshof (bgh; federal court of appeal)
- •Charged with murder
- •Defense to murder
- •Drug charges
- •White-collar crimes
- •Misdemeanors (Part I)
- •Misdemeanors (Part II).
- •Misdemeanors (Part III).
- •The history of punishment.
- •Criminal Law
- •Criminal procedure
- •Investigatory and Accusatory Police Procedure
- •Pre-Trial Procedure
- •Criminal Trial Procedure
- •Stages of the Criminal Trial
- •Sentencing
- •Bankruptcy: an overview
- •Purposes and Benefits of the usa patriot Act
- •The English Judicial System
- •Historical development of anglo-american law
- •Criminal law: The Issue of Public Wrongs
- •Criminal procedure
- •Torts: The Issue of Private Wrongs
- •Property law: The Issue of Rights
- •Contract law: The Issue of Vows
- •Equity: The Issue of Fairness
- •Abfchnitt 2 Grundrechte 1848 und 1871. Weimarer Republik.
- •Das Gericht für den öffentlichen Dienst der Europäischen Union
- •Das Verfahren vor dem Gericht
- •Institutionen der Europäischen Union und andere Organe
- •Das Grundgesetz. Die Gesetzgebung. Kontrolle der Regierung.
- •Das Gericht erster Instanz
- •Das Gericht erster Instanz (2)
- •Der Gerichtshof der Europäischen Gemeinschaften
- •Der Gerichtshof der Europäischen Gemeinschaften (2)
- •Landesverfassungsgericht Sachsen-Anhalt
- •Geschichte der Verfassungsgerichtsbarkeit in Sachsen
- •Verfassungsgerichtshof des Freistaates Sachsen
- •Verfassungsgerichtshof Rheinland-Pfalz. Richter
- •Verfassungsbeschwerde
- •Staatsaufbau Deutschlands
- •Der Bundestag
- •Bundeshaushalt
- •Die Wahlen in Deutschland
- •Der Bundespräsident
- •Deutscher Bundesrat
- •Das Bundeskriminalamt
- •Der Notar (1)
- •Der Notar (2)
- •Berufsziel Notar
- •§128 Notarielle Beurkundung
- •Die Richter in Deutschland
- •Wahl der Bundesrichter
- •Strafgerichtsbarkeit
- •Die Unabhängigkeit der Justiz auf internationaler Ebene
- •Verfassungsgerichtshof des Landes Berlin. Gerichte in Berlin
- •Der Thüringer Verfassungsgerichtshof
- •Der Aufbau der Staatsanwaltschaften
- •Die Aufgaben der Staatsanwaltschaft in der Strafvollstreckung
- •Rechtspfleger
- •Zivilrecht
- •Menschenrechte
- •Menschenrechte in Deutschland
- •Menschenrechte in Deutschland (2)
- •Juristische Person des Zivilrechtes
- •Juristische Person des öffentlichen Rechts
- •Rechtsgeschichte
- •Das Zivilrecht
- •Strafrecht
- •Verdächtige als Zeugen
- •Strafverteidigung
- •Revision
- •Nebenklage
- •Zeugenbeistandschaft
- •Strafanzeigen
- •Wirtschaftsstrafrecht
- •Steuerstrafrecht
- •Vermögens- und Eigentumsdelikte. Kapitalstrafrecht
- •Betäubungsmittelstrafrecht
- •Betäubungsmittelstrafrecht 2
- •Strafvollstreckungs- und Strafvollzugsrecht
- •Aufgabe des Bundesverfassungsgerichts
- •Die Organisation des Bundesverfassungsgerichts
- •Die Verfassungsbeschwerde zum Bundesverfassungsgericht
- •Zulässigkeitsvoraussetzungen der Verfassungsbeschwerde
- •Strafverfahren und Zeugenstellung
- •Das Zivilverfahren
- •Die gesellschaftliche Bedeutung der Kriminalität
- •Der Beruf ist Jurist
- •Wesen der Menschenrechte
- •Menschenrechtssituation in Deutschland
- •Allgemeine Erklärung der Menschenrechte (aemr)
- •Völkerrecht
- •Verhältnis des Völkerrechts zum nationalen Recht
- •Geschichte des Bundesministeriums der Justiz
- •Aufgaben im Bereich der Gesetzgebung. Verwaltungsaufgaben
- •Justiz und Nationalsozialismus
- •Rechtspflege. Zivilverfahren
- •Justizmodernisierung
- •Juristische Aus- und Fortbildung
- •Institutionen der Rechtspflege.
- •Strafprozessrecht
- •Geschichte des Bürgerlichen Rechts
- •Heutiges Zivilrecht
- •Zivilprozessrecht
- •Das Bürgerliche Recht
- •Menschheit als Völkerrechtssubjekt
- •Rechtsgeschichte
- •Die Menschenrechte seit dem 11. September 2001
- •Daktyloskopische Untersuchungen
- •Lügendetektortest
- •Forensische Beweisführung
- •Ballistik
- •Partie 3 les modalités de saisine des juridictions
- •I. Les juridictions civiles
- •II. Les juridictions pénales
- •III. Les juridictions administratives
- •IV. L'exercice des voies de recours
- •Les procédures civiles rapides
- •I. Rapidité par nature
- •Iº/ Les motifs de rapidité
- •2°/ Les contreparties de la rapidité
- •II. Rapidité provoquée
- •1°/ La procédure à jour fixe
- •I. La comparution par procès-verbal
- •II. La comparution immediate
- •III. La comparution à délai rapproche (mineurs)
- •Bibliography
The history of punishment.
For the most history punishment has been both painful and public in order to act as deterrent to others. Physical punishments and public humiliations were social events and carried out in most accessible parts of towns, often on market days when the greater part of the population were present. Justice had to be seen to be done.
A particularly harsh punishment is sometimes said to be draconian, after Draco, the lawgiver of ancient Athens. Draco’s laws were shockingly severe, so severe that they were said to have been written not in ink but in blood. Under Draco’s code death was the penalty for almost all criminal offences. But as the adjective Spartan still testifies, its wholly militarized rival Sparta was the harshest a state of law can be on its own citizens.
Punishment is the practice of imposing something unpleasant on a wrongdoer as a response to something unwanted that the wrongdoer has done. In psychological terms this is known as "positive punishment". "Negative punishment", on the other hand, is when something is removed from or denied to the punished. A prisoner, for example, is both positively and negatively punished. He has an unpleasant thing imposed on him and also his freedom is removed.
Criminal Law
Criminal law, also termed as Penal law, encompasses the rules and statutes written by Congress and state legislators dealing with any criminal activity that causes harm to the general public, with penalties. It also covers criminal procedure connected with charging, trying, sentencing and imprisoning defendants convicted of crimes. It regulates how suspects are investigated, charged and tried. Criminal law also includes decisions by appellate courts that define and interpret criminal law and regulate criminal procedure, in the absence of clear legislated rules. In order to be found guilty of violating a criminal law, the prosecution must show that the defendant intended to act as he/she did. In other words, there had to be intention. Criminal law is typically enforced by the government. The state, through a prosecutor, initiates the suit. Criminal law encompasses Substantive Criminal law; Criminal Procedure; and the special problems in administration and enforcement of criminal justice.
Substantive Criminal law defines the crimes committed against the state and may establish punishment. It defines how the facts in the case will be handled, the classification of the crimes (such as, whether the crime is a felony or a misdemeanor), as well as how the crime should be charged. In essence, it deals with the “substance” of the matter. Criminal statutes determine which courts will hear what cases and who will prosecute those cases.
Criminal Procedure describes the methods through which the criminal laws are enforced. For example: when the accused can be searched; when evidence can be seized; and when eyewitnesses can be investigated. Criminal Procedure deals with a defendant's individual, constitution rights - including the right to remain silent, the right to a speedy, public trial by a jury, the right to a competent attorney, and the defendant's right to confront his or her accuser.
Enforcement of criminal laws in the United States has traditionally been a matter handled by the states. Criminal statutes, which vary by jurisdiction, describe the type of conduct that has been deemed a crime, the intent required, and in some instances, the proper punishment. In the application of punishment, there are typically five objectives: retribution; deterrence; prevention/incapacitation; rehabilitation; and restitution. There are limitations on the punishment that may be imposed. The U.S. Constitution's Eighth Amendment states: 'Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.' A number of state constitutions also contain the same, or similar, provisions.
