Bankruptcy. Constitutional Law. Effect of Federal Statute Forbidding Use of Testimony of Bankrupt in Subsequent Criminal Proceedings

1925 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 389
Author(s):  
Giuliana Ziccardi Capaldo

This editorial focuses on the violation of the jus cogens principle of non-impunity for acts of torture as occurred in the Cestaro v. Italy case, where the perpetrators went unpunished due to the statute of limitations. The Italian Supreme Court failed to apply this principle of global constitutional law. Nor did the ECtHR implement effective remedies against impunity. The author proposes reopening time-barred criminal proceedings as a useful tool against impunity to give full effect to ECtHR jurisprudence supporting the generally recognized principle of the non-applicability of statutory limitations to crimes against humanity.She stresses the need to enhance the effectiveness of the supervisory role of the ECtHR in ensuring the observance of jus cogens human rights principles—of which the ECHR “forms part”—through a unitary approach of courts to the fight against impunity based on an evolutionary interpretation of the Convention, which would provide more effective and integrated protection of such rights.


2016 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 287-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Burton Crawford

Plenary executive power seems repugnant to the rule of law. It is often said that such power cannot exist: that all executive power must have legal limits. Yet, it remains unclear which principle or principles of Australian constitutional law would prevent the federal Parliament from conferring plenary executive power. The High Court has suggested that a federal statute purporting to confer an entirely open-ended discretion on a Minister would simply not be a ‘law’, or else lack the requisite connection to a head of power found in ss 51 or 52 of the Australian Constitution. This article examines the latter claim. It explains the nature of the limitations imposed by ss 51 and 52 and the role of the High Court in ensuring that those limitations are complied with. It concludes that the scope of executive power that Parliament may confer is constrained by ss 51 and 52, but not to the extent that has been suggested by the High Court.


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