EU SUBSTANTIVE CRIMINAL LAW AND PROTECTION OF VICTIMS:
Repozitorij
EU Substantive Criminal Law and Protection of Victims
Studij: Građanskopravni - 9. semestar
Kaznenopravni - 9. semestar
Međunarodnopravni - 9. semestar
Pravo Europske unije - 9. semestar
Trgovačkopravni - 9. semestar
Ustavno-upravni - 9. semestar
Šifra: 96811
ECTS: 4.0
Nositelji: prof. dr. sc. Maja Munivrana
prof. dr. sc. Ksenija Turković
izv. prof. dr. sc. Sunčana Roksandić
izv. prof. dr. sc. Aleksandar Maršavelski
Ispitni rokovi:
  • 10. 06. 2024.
  • 24. 06. 2024.
  • 08. 07. 2024.
  • 26. 08. 2024.
  • 09. 09. 2024.
Prijava ispita: Studomat
Osnovni podaci
EU Substantive Criminal Law and Protection of Victims Građanskopravni - 9. semestar
Kaznenopravni - 9. semestar
Međunarodnopravni - 9. semestar
Pravo Europske unije - 9. semestar
Trgovačkopravni - 9. semestar
Ustavno-upravni - 9. semestar
4.0 96811
Nositelj Konzultacije Lokacija
prof. dr. sc. Maja Munivrana

Konzultacije po dogovoru

Trg Republike Hrvatske 3, soba soba 17/I
prof. dr. sc. Ksenija Turković
izv. prof. dr. sc. Sunčana Roksandić

četvrtkom u 9 sati. Obzirom na izvanredne okolnosti uzrokovane potresom i COVID-19 pandemijom, dostupna e-mailom: suncana.roksandic@pravo.hr.

Ćirilometodska 4, soba Ćirilometodska 4, soba 54
izv. prof. dr. sc. Aleksandar Maršavelski

ponedjeljkom u 18:30 sati, Gundulićeva 10, soba 12/I. (najaviti dolazak putem e-maila zbog mogućnosti službenog odsustva)

Gundulićeva 10, soba 12
Literatura
PREPORUČENA: Andre Klip; European Criminal Law, An Integrative Approach; INTERSENTIA UITGEVERS (2012), str. selected
PREPORUČENA: Steve Peers; EU Justice and Home Affairs Law; OUP Oxford (2011), str. selected
PREPORUČENA: Irvin Waller; Rights for Victims of Crime; Rowman Littlefield Publishers (2010), str. selected
Opis predmeta
- Glavni cilj ovog predmeta, koji je uveden kao Jean Monnet modul, je da studenti usvoje napredna znanja i razumijevanje materije materijalnog kaznenog prava EU i zaštite žrtava.Što se metodologije tiče, ovaj će predmet predstavljati forum za akademske debate te će razvijati kritičko promišljanje kod studenata i orijentiranost ka rješavanju problemskih zadataka. Studente će se ohrabrivati da postavljaju pitanja, komentiraju i debatiraju na satu.
Ispitni rokovi
10. 06. 2024.
24. 06. 2024.
08. 07. 2024.
26. 08. 2024.
09. 09. 2024.

Next Tuesday, May 7th, presentations will be held in the area of Trafficing in firearms and Organized crime. The class will be held as usual, but it has to end until 11:30. 

 

For trafficing in firearms, please consult: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/home-affairs/what-we-do/policies/organized-crime-and-human-trafficking/trafficking-in-firearms/index_en.htm

Morover, please consult Firearms and the internal security of the EU: protecting citizens and disrupting illegal trafficking, Opinion of 17 February 2014 on the Communication from the Commission to the Council and the European Parliament on "Firearms and the internal security of the EU: protecting citizens and disrupting illegal trafficking" (see Repozitorij for the Communication). Summary is available here: http://secure.edps.europa.eu/EDPSWEB/webdav/site/mySite/shared/Documents/Consultation/Opinions/2014/14-02-17_Firearms_opinion_ex_sum_EN.pdf.

Also, please see the Communication from the Commission to the Council and EU Parliament COM(2013) 716 final:  Firearms and the internal security of the EU: protecting citizens and disrupting illegal trafficking: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/home-affairs/what-we-do/policies/organized-crime-and-human-trafficking/trafficking-in-firearms/docs/1_en_act_part1_v12.pdf 

According to the Communication (see the link above), there are an estimated 80 million legally-held civilian firearms in the EU. While there are no precise statistics, the many firearms in illegal circulation are often the result of theft ordiversion from their lawful lifecycle, of being illegally imported from third countries and of the conversion of other objects into firearms. Almost half a million firearms lost or stolen in the EU remain unaccounted for, the overwhelming majority of which are civilian firearms, according to the Schengen Information System.Illegally-held firearms, meanwhile, are often used to coerce and to intimidate victims of organised crime. The illegal import and sale of these weapons, as well as their production, provide lucrative business for the EU’s estimated 3600 organised crime groups.Large amounts of powerful military grade weapons have since the mid-1990s reached the EU from the Western Balkans and former Soviet Bloc countries,11 often trafficked in small quantities and hidden in vehicles like long distance coaches to avoid detection12. Recent upheavals in North Africa and the Middle East carry a risk that surplus and stolen military arms will reach European criminal markets along similar routes. Firearms, parts and components are also, to an increasing extent, traded online and delivered through mail order, postal or express delivery services. Law enforcement authorities in the EU are concerned that firearms which have been deactivated are being illegally reactivated and sold for criminal purposes, that items such as alarm guns, air weapons and blank-firers are being converted into illegal lethal firearms, and that criminals may very soon exploit 3D printing technologies for assembling home-made weapons or making components to be used for reactivating firearms. 

 

The Report on the Organized crime, corruption and ilicit arms trafficing in an enlarged EU is available in the Repository.

Morover, please read a newspapaer article:  Charlie Hebdo Massacre: Illegal Gun Trafficking Brings Millions Of Weapons Into The EU:  http://www.ibtimes.com/charlie-hebdo-massacre-illegal-gun-trafficking-brings-millions-weapons-eu-1779070

Please also consult, for critiques of the EU programme on illicite arms trafficking e.g. http://www.face.eu/firearms-ammunition; Also see "EU must stop its arms trade hypocrisy" http://newint.org/blog/2014/01/31/eu-arms-trade-hypocrisy/

Also please see Declaration by the European Union, the associated countries of Central and Eastern Europe, the associated country Cyprus and Iceland and Norway, EFTA countries members of the European Economic Area, on the EU programme for preventing and combating illicit trafficking in conventional arms (1997); 

For EUROPEAN UNION INITIATIVES TO CONTROL SMALL ARMS AND LIGHT WEAPONS: TOWARDS A MORE COORDINATED APPROACH see http://www.sipri.org/research/disarmament/eu-consortium/publications/nonproliferation-paper-33

 

 

Popis obavijesti