Keywords
criminalistics
learning the past
criminal procedure
learning the past
criminal procedure
How to Cite
Hiding crime and punishing power. (2021). Academic Journal of Internal Affairs, 69(10), 1691-1707. https://doi.org/10.38146/BSZ.2021.10.1
Abstract
Learning the past will acquire a procedural significance when some real event of the past would trigger legal consequences. In addition to criminal cases this can be realized in civil litigation, in administrative procedures of the public power, but examples can also be taken from the field of labour law. As criminalistics represent the science of reconstructing a past event, an extension of it to all legal fields can be reasoned. However, such a turn does not have taken place, the discipline of investigation remained within the sphere of criminal sciences. The article examines the causes of that.
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Similar Articles
- Jürgen Stock, INTERPOL: The Past, Present and Future of International Police Cooperation , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 71 No. 3.ksz (2023): Különszám
- Mátyás Hegyaljai, Memorable Moments from the Last 30 Years of INTERPOL , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 71 No. 11 (2023)
- Jürgen Stock, INTERPOL: The Past, Present and Future of International Police Cooperation , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 71 No. 11 (2023)
- Barbara Mágó, ‘Citizenship 30’, or the last three decades of the Hungarian Citizenship Act , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 72 No. 1 (2024)
- Balázs Elek, Information technology in the criminal procedure , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 62 No. 7-8 (2014)
- Anett Erzsébet Gácsi, The Exclusionary Rule doctrine in the United States of America Criminal Procedure , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 62 No. 6 (2014)
- Árpád Erdei , In memory of Ferenc Kratochwill. The situation of the victim in criminal proceedings – as he saw it and as it is now , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 62 No. 5 (2014)
- Ágnes Csete, Márta M. Toronykőy, Seventeen years’ expereince of the Csongrád farm-program , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 62 No. 4 (2014)
- Csaba Fenyvesi, Justizmord and investigative errors , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 62 No. 3 (2014)
- Miklós Angyal, Systematic crime scene investigation-triggered lessons for problem oriented policing: the case study of shootings in a Hungarian university , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 61 No. 10 (2013)
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Géza Finszter, Legal basis for the use of covert means , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 72 No. 6 (2024)
- Géza Finszter, Legal basis for the use of covert means , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 72 No. 6 (2024)
- Géza Finszter, The place and perspectives of administrative and law enforcement research , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 70 No. 11 (2022)
- Géza Finszter, Complementary policing , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 71 No. 1 (2023)
- Géza Finszter, Endre Bócz , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 69 No. 11 (2021)
- Géza Finszter, Tibor Ibolya: Studies in the history of criminology , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 63 No. 10 (2015)
- Géza Finszter, László Korinek, Tracing the footsteps of the lost suspicion , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 66 No. 3 (2018)
- Géza Finszter, László Korinek, Facts are stubborn things … The worse for the facts?! , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 69 No. 4 (2021)
- Géza Finszter, Tibor Király (1920–2021) , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 70 No. 2 (2022)
- Géza Finszter, “Today, a mentally prepared team is being formed, which is the initiator and recipient of the scientific approach… " , Academic Journal of Internal Affairs: Vol. 63 No. 5 (2015)