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Respect of the right to a fair trial in indigenous African criminal justice systems : the case of Rwanda and South AfricaKayitare, Frank January 2004 (has links)
"As already mentioned, gauranteeing the right to a fair trial aims at protecting individuals from unlawful and arbitrary curtailment or deprivation of other basic rights and freedoms. The fundamental importance of the right to a fair trial is illustrated not only by international instruments and the extensive body of interpretation it has generated, but most recently, by a proposal to include it in the non-derogable rights stipulated in article 4(2) of the ICCPR. Standards for a fair trial may stem from binding obligations that are included in human rights treaties to which a state in examination is a party, but they may also be found in documents and practices which, though not binding, can be taken to express the direction in which the law is evolving. One of the problems is that law and human rights have been viewed largely as Western concepts, and are therefore defined and valued by Western criteria. This leads to a number of difficulties. First, there are many non-Western societies in which law and human rights thus defined, is impractical and mechanisms of protecting human rights in non-Western justice systems are not recognised as comparable counterparts to those in Western societies. Secondly, African states have failed to abide by their international fair trial obligations because, probably, these standards are impractical given the realities like poverty, illiteracy and strong cultural beliefs that characterise most African communities. As a result, the law applied by the Western style courts is felt to be so out of touch with the needs of most African communities, and coercion to resort to them amounts to denial of justice. This explains why communities, especially in the rural Africa, resort to indigenous African justice systems irrespective of state recognition or otherwise. Upon realisation that the Western style of justice did not respond to the prevailing post-genocide situation for example, the government of Rwanda re-established traditional courts to help deal with the crime of genocide and foster reconciliation. A Gacaca court is constituted of a panel of lay judges who coordinate a process in which genocide survivors and suspected perpetrators and the latter between themselves confront each other. They, and the community, participate by telling the truth of what happened; who did what during the genocide, and then the judges, based on the evidence given to them, decide on the case. These judges are elected by their respective communities for their integrity, not their learning. However, human rights organisations argue that Gacaca proceedings violate the accused persons's fair trial rights. They question among other things capacity of lay judges who make decisions in these courts, to conduct a fair trial. They also contend that Gacaca does not guarantee the right to be presumed innocent because it requires confessoins and that defendants are denied legal representation. In South Africa, traditional courts (konwn as chiefs' courts) exist. They have played a crucial role in dispensing justice in the indigenous communities and are prototypes of the kind of dispute resolution mechanisms desirable in a modern society. They apply 'people's law', which developed as a result of lack of legitimacy of the Western system of justice among the indigenous South Africans. However, critics see them as conservative and unable to render justice in the modern social, economic and political climate in South Africa today. As a result, Western style court proceedings that are conducted in foreign languages to indigenous communities, and thus have to rely on inaccurate and unreliable interpreters in addition to costs for legal counsels and subjection to very technical and formal procedures, are the only alternative in criminal matters. Briefly, the major problem is to ascertain whether indigenous African criminal justice systems do, or otherwise conform to fair trial standards. If they do not, according to who are they not fair? In other words, is there a universal measure of fairness or does appreciation depend on people's enviornment and their socio-economic backgrounds, in which case, the beneficiaries of indigenous African criminal justice systems should be the ones to appreciate its fairness?" -- Introduction. / Thesis (LLM (Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa)) -- University of Pretoria, 2004. / Prepared under the supervision of Prof. Nii Ashie Kotey at the Faculty of Law, University of Ghana / http://www.chr.up.ac.za/academic_pro/llm1/dissertations.html / Centre for Human Rights / LLM
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Teisės į teisingą teisinį procesą samprata konstitucinio teismo jurisprudencijoje / Concept ot the right to a fair legal process in the jurisprudence of constitutional courtMučinienė, Ramutė 22 January 2009 (has links)
Šiuolaikinė tarptautinė teisė įtvirtina pagarbą žmogaus teisėms bei užtikrina šių teisių įgyvendinimą šalių nacionalinėje teisėje. Žmogaus teisės apima įvairias asmens teises ir laisves, tačiau kad šios teisės būtų realiai įgyvendinamos visų pirma būtina užtikrinti teisę į asmens teisių ir laisvių gynybą. Lietuvos Respublikos Konstitucijoje įtvirtinta teisė kreiptis į teismą. Teisė į teismą savo apimtimi yra gerokai siauresnė, nei teisė į teisingą teisinį procesą, tačiau neužtikrinus pirmosios nebus įmanoma ir antroji, ką ne kartą savo nutarimuose yra pabrėžės ir Lietuvos Konstitucinis Teismas.
Šio magistro baigiamojo darbo tikslas išanalizuoti ir nustatyti teisės į teisingą teisinį procesą įtvirtinimo Lietuvos Konstitucinio teismo ir kitų valstybių konstitucinės kontrolės institucijų jurisprudencijoje teorinius ir praktinius aspektus. Darbo pradžioje aptariamas žmogaus teisių įgyvendinimas demokratinėje visuomenė, trumpai apžvelgiant jų istorinę raidą ir teisinį įtvirtinimą. Antrajame skyriuje nagrinėjama teisės į teisingą teismą samprata ir jos pagrindiniai elementai Europos žmogaus teisių ir pagrindinių laisvių apsaugos konvencijos aspektu, bei atsižvelgiant į jų įtvirtinimą Lietuvos teisinėje sistemoje. Trečiasis skyrius skiriamas teisės į teisingą teisinį procesą sampratos lyginamajai analizei, t.y. analizuojama teisės į teisingą teisinį procesą sampratos interpretavimas Lietuvos Konstitucinio, Lietuvos Aukščiausiojo ir Lietuvos vyriausiojo administracinio teismų... [toliau žr. visą tekstą] / Contemporary international law declares the respect to human rights and guarantees the implementation of these rights in the national law of states. Human rights involve various rights and freedoms, but in purpose the mentioned rights could be implemented in reality, first of all it is necessary to guarantee the right of protection of human rights and freedoms. The human right to apply to the court is set in the Constitution of Republic of Lithuania. Right to trial is much more tight than right to a fair legal process, but if the first is not guaranteed, it is not possible and the second one, this was pointed in the decisions of the Constitutional Court of Lithuania for several times.
The aim of the present thesis is to analyze and to determine the theoretical and practical aspects of fixation of the right to fair legal process in the jurisprudence of Constitutional Court of Lithuania and of institutions of constitutional control of other states. The thesis begins with review of implementation of human rights in democratic society, with short review of historical development and legal fixation. The second part analyses the concept of right to a fair trial and it‘s basic elements in the aspect of Convention of the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, considering their fixation in the legal system of Lithuania. The third part of thesis is designed for the comparative analysis of concept of right to a fair legal process i.e. analyses interpretation of concept... [to full text]
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Práva podniků při vyšetřování deliktů v soutěžním právu Evropské unie / Rights of enterprises in the investigation of delicts within EU competition lawTomicová, Jana January 2015 (has links)
As it is evident from the title, in my thesis I would like to provide an overview of the undertakings' procedural rights in proceedings under Article 101 and/or 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. Given the extensive investigative powers that are granted to the European Commission by the Council Regulation No 1/2003 and the consequences of being found guilty of violating Article 101 and/or 102 of the TFEU, it is necessary to ensure that the undertakings have enough ways available to exercise their right to defence and other rights and privileges guaranteed by the EU law and international treaties such as European Convention on Human Rights (e.g. the right to respect for private life). For this reason the EU law provides a range of procedural rights that should guarantee that both all the fundamental rights are observed and also serve as a system of checks and balances that prevents the misuse of the Commission's investigative powers. My thesis will focus individual rights of undertakings that are provided to them by the Council Regulation No 1/2003 and EU courts judicature. I will analyse their scope and purpose, the conditions under which they can be exercised and their limitations. Simultaneously a comparison between the rights of undertakings in the EU and U.S. legal system will...
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Ochrana práva na spravedlivý proces ve vztahu k řízení o předběžné otázce / Protection of Right to Fair Trial in Relation to Preliminary Ruling ProceedingsNěmečková, Petra January 2012 (has links)
v anglickém jazyce - English abstract Protection of Right to Fair Trial in Relation to Preliminary Ruling Proceedings Right to fair trial is one of fundamental human rights, which enables individuals to effectively invoke their rights and freedoms before a lawful, impartial and independent court. In Europe, the protection of this right is guaranteed at a multi-layer level, whose layers interact: first layer is formed by constitutional orders of individual States, second layer by institutions of European Union, in particular the Court of Justice of the European Union, and a third one, that of the European Court for Human Rights. In the European Union, the Treaties have introduced the mechanism of preliminary ruling with the aim of preserving unity within the Union and of ensuring coherent interpretation and application of European law by the courts of the Member States. Preliminary ruling proceedings ensure effective cooperation between national courts and the Court of Justice of the European Union. Art. 267 TFEU provides for an obligation to request a preliminary ruling for national courts of last instance (if none of the CILFIT case law conditions is met). Breach of this obligation may entail violation of right to fair trial at all three layers of human rights protection in Europe. Each European...
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