Difference between revisions of "Victim's Rights"

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=International Approach to Victim's Rights=
 
=International Approach to Victim's Rights=
The concern that many states either did not have the resources to prosecute criminals, or willfully failed to prosecute criminals lead, in part, to the founding of the [[International Criminal Court]] and the [[Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court]]
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The concern that many states either did not have the resources to prosecute criminals, or willfully failed to prosecute criminals lead, in part, to the founding of the [[International Criminal Court]] and the [[Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court]].
  
 
=Victim's Bill of Rights=
 
=Victim's Bill of Rights=

Revision as of 13:54, 17 November 2010

Background

In order for a crime to exist, a victim or potential victim must exist. Thus, the Model Penal Code states that a defendant's conduct must 1) inflict or threaten 2) substantial harm to individual or public interests.

The harm is often the clearest when the victim is an individual. The second class, "public interests", is often less tangible, more politically charged and are often subject to attack. Public interest crimes are sometimes called "victimless crimes." Proponents of "public interest crimes" will often hold that crimes are not victimless at all but that the spillover effects of these activities result in societal harm.

Public Prosection

Prior to the 19th century, many criminal cases were privately prosecuted by the victim. This model slowly fell out of favor as the state replaced a private prosecution model with a centralized, state-based model of public prosecution.

International Approach to Victim's Rights

The concern that many states either did not have the resources to prosecute criminals, or willfully failed to prosecute criminals lead, in part, to the founding of the International Criminal Court and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.

Victim's Bill of Rights

The last twenty years have seen increased legislative attention to victim's of crimes. As a result, victims now have more rights in a criminal case than ever before. These rights may be codified separately or in some cases, collected into one Victim's Bill of Rights.

Country Specific Applications

Canada

United States