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Audi Alteram Partem in Criminal Proceedings

Towards a Participatory Understanding of Criminal Justice in Europe and Latin America

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2017

Overview

  • Provides a comprehensive analysis of legislation and case law
  • Engages in comparison at the national, international and supranational level
  • Elaborates on solution models and proposals for both lawyers and practitioners

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Table of contents (17 papers)

  1. Introduction to the Research

  2. Audi Alteram Partem in Transnational Criminal Justice. The Perspective of Domestic Law

  3. Convergences and Divergences in the National Understanding of Participatory Rights in Domestic and Transnational Criminal Justice

  4. Evolution of a Wideranging Participatory Approach to Criminal Justice in International Human Rights Law and EU Law

  5. Developments in International and Supranational Law Towards a Participatory Understanding of Transnational Criminal Justice

Keywords

About this book

This book analyses current developments in Europe and Latin America towards the greater involvement of the parties in the administration of criminal justice. Focusing on both national criminal proceedings and transnational cases, this study employs a comparative law approach to examine the shift experienced by Italy and Brazil from the long tradition of mixed criminal justice to unprecedented adversarial trends. The identification of common needs and divergences from the national approach to criminal justice paves the way for a subsequent analysis of new solution models emerging from international human rights law and EU law. To a great extent, these developments are due to the increasing impact of international human rights case-law on the criminal justice systems of the countries in question. The book concludes by proposing a set of qualitative requirements for a participatory model of criminal justice.


Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Law, University of Messina, Messina, Italy

    Stefano Ruggeri

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