Respect for Human Rights and the Concept of Transnational Organised Crime (Challenges in the Rule-of-Law Field)
Respect for Human Rights and the Concept of Transnational Organised Crime (Challenges in the Rule-of-Law Field)
Author(s): Mladen VukčevićSubject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Essay|Book Review |Scientific Life, Criminal Law, Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
Published by: Fakultet pravnih nauka Univerziteta Donja Gorica
Keywords: human rights; transnational organised crime; criminal law
Summary/Abstract: Social phenomena research models are more difficult to be predicted than those ones in the natural sciences and that is why these are often questioned in the modern world. The above also stands for the study of human rights, the catalogue of which is continually expanding, especially internationalization hereof, which dates back to the end of World War II. Since then, human rights are no longer a „matter of the state”, but quite the contrary: new rights are introduced on an international level, while existing ones are standardised along with the establishment of new forms of protection hereof. After all, the history of humanity, when taking into account a long period of time, may be presented as a quadrilateral, including the following: prescription, realization, violation and protection of human rights. All of this also applies to the respect for human rights in the fight against transnational organised crime, since, even in such circumstances, human rights must be respected, that is, which means that these must not be violated in the name of efficiency in the actions taken by judicial and police authorities.
Journal: Studia Iuridica Montenegrina
- Issue Year: VI/2024
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 103-113
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English