THE PRINCIPLE OF INSIGNIFICANCE IN CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51891/rease.v10i11.17069Keywords:
Principle of insignificance. Public Administration. Criminal law. Material Typicality. Courts.Abstract
The purpose of this work is to analyze the Principle of insignificance in crimes against public administration. The Principle of insignificance is based on excluding material typicality in crimes in which the harmful damages are small. And will cite cases addressed by higher courts. This principle was internalized in the national legal system, however, It has been applied in cases in which the parties are private. However, both the jurisprudence and the doctrine in this jurisprudential structure on the present topic, reduce the possibility of the incidence of the principle of insignificance in crimes committed against the public administration, according to article 37 of the Federal Constitution, due to its legal nature, and príncipes, and others that are essential in Public administration. The methodology that will be applied is qualitative with explanatory research through studies in doctrines, electronic articles and jurisprudence. The results show that it will be up to the judge to decide based on the seriousness of the case presented. And the conclusion is that the principle of insignificance applied to crimes against public administration has the essence of studying each case and applying sanctions based on the severity of the crime.
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