Crime, Criminal Justice, and the Jury Courts in Late Republican Rome
廣島法學 45 巻 2 号
204-164 頁
2021-10-28 発行
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この文献の参照には次のURLをご利用ください : https://doi.org/10.15027/51609
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HLJ_45-2_204.pdf
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種類 :
全文
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タイトル ( eng ) |
Crime, Criminal Justice, and the Jury Courts in Late Republican Rome
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作成者 | |
収録物名 |
廣島法學
The Hiroshima Law Journal
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巻 | 45 |
号 | 2 |
開始ページ | 204 |
終了ページ | 164 |
収録物識別子 |
[ISSN] 03865010
[NCID] AN0021395X
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抄録 |
During the early Roman Republican era, serious crimes came under the jurisdiction of the assemblies of the Roman people (comitia), which, when acting as popular courts, were referred to as iudicia populi. In the course of time, however, it became common for the assemblies to delegate their judicial powers to specially appointed commissions, which acted as extraordinary courts (quaestiones extraordinariae) charged with the investigation and punishment of certain crimes. During the period of Rome’s expansion in the Mediterranean world, as the city’s population increased and various forms of crime proliferated, standing jury courts (quaestiones perpetuae) began to be established for trying those accused of common offences. The present paper traces the development of the Roman standing court system in its social and political setting, presenting information on guiding principles, procedures and goals and identifying some of the problems hampering its operation. It is submitted that, despite its shortcomings, the system did achieve a more efficient dispensation of justice and introduced new elements that fundamentally affected the subsequent development of the criminal law.
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言語 |
英語
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資源タイプ | 紀要論文 |
出版者 |
広島大学法学会
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発行日 | 2021-10-28 |
権利情報 |
許可なく複製・転載することを禁じる
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出版タイプ | Version of Record(出版社版。早期公開を含む) |
アクセス権 | オープンアクセス |
収録物識別子 |
[ISSN] 0386-5010
[NCID] AN0021395X
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