Introduction to Criminal Law: Concepts, Functions, and Principles

Thematic Unit 1: Introduction to Criminal Law

Lesson 1: Basic Concepts of Criminal Law

1. Criminal Law and Social Control: Concept and Forms

Criminal Law is the branch of legislation that regulates the state’s power to punish, defining what is punishable (disvalued behavior) and its consequences.

Legal Consequences for Committing a Crime
  • Tier System: The penalty is the only consequence of repression for committing a crime.
  • Tier System: Incorporates security measures.
  • Some authors support a third way: the repair of damage to replace or complement the penalty when it contributes to satisfying the ends of sentences and the needs of the victim.
Meanings of the Term Criminal Law
  • Dogmatic Science or Criminal Justice: This discipline deals with the interpretation, organization, and development of legal and scientific opinions in the field of criminal law.
  • Subjective Sense: Refers to the state’s power to punish (the right to punish).
  • Objective Sense: The set of rules of positive law governing punitive power to protect human relationships in the community and safeguarding the most valuable legal rights.

Social Control

Social control is a fundamental condition of social life. Through it, every community ensures the rules and behavioral expectations of its members needed for its continued existence. At the same time, it limits individual freedom and leads to socialization as an integral group.

Social control encompasses:

  • Collective norms
  • Social sanctions
  • Control processes that exert pressure on behavior
Forms of Social Control
  • Informal social customs or practices, the media, etc.
  • Formal, legal rules in general. Criminal rules in particular.

The penal system, as a means of highly formalized legal control, comprises:

  • Standards: Defining deviant behavior as criminal.
  • Penalties: Reactions generated by these behaviors.
  • Procedure and Institutional Apparatus: For its implementation.

2. Functions of Criminal Law

The functions of criminal law relate to the state model to which it belongs and to the function and purpose of punishment. Regarding the latter, there are:

  • Absolute Theories: The role of criminal law is merely retributive, so the sentence is an end in itself, a bad tax to achieve justice.
  • Concerning Theories: The penalty has a preventive purpose, preventing future criminal acts. Prevention can be general (to society in order to create fear) or special (addressed to the offender, for example, creating reintegration).
  • Mixed Theories: The essence of punishment is retributive, but it should aim for preventive purposes.
State Models
  • Theocratic State: Identifies with the concept of retributive punishment, which finds its legitimacy in divine justice.
  • Absolutist State: Prevention is identified with an unlimited general saying the state as an end in itself.
  • Classic Liberal State: The penalty is an instrument of repressive state power.
  • Social Status: The mission of criminal law is the protection of society against crime and the fight against crime by incorporating special presence as instruments of security measures.
  • Democratic State: Composed of three functions of DP:
  • Protection of Legal Interests and Motivation: Protection of legal goods (goods that facilitate the participation of men in society) by preventing limited, and citizens’ motivation to avoid offending, showing in advance the improper conduct.
  • Enforcing Ethical and Social Values: The system of criminal law should be directed to the purposes teleological basis guiding values, political in nature criminal.
  • Supervision of the Enforcement of the Rule: Through the pain that used to exercise in public confidence towards the norm, to have fidelity to the law and accept the consequences of the infringement to its precepts.

3. Anthropological Bases

Criminal law, as a tool to recognize man as he is, provides a daily understanding and historical and cultural dynamics of man. The legal order is modified according to the changes experienced by man.

Criminal law is understood teleologically, founded in the anthropological, and therefore it is recognized as a minimum:

  • Be an order regulating human behaviors.
  • Let there be no contradiction between their devalued human behavior.
  • Regular features you do not intend to ignore the laws of the physical world.
  • Recognize the self of man.

The Fundamental Principles of Penal Control Regulators

The fundamental concepts of criminal law are the crime, which is the kind of illegality that connects to the reactions, and the punishment and security measures, which are the legal consequences that characterize criminal law.

4. Concepts of Criminal Law

In Fact

This definition of crime binds to the commission of a fact, leaving aside the author’s personal characteristics, which are only relevant when the judicial individualization of punishment. The offense injures or endangers protected rights.

Copyright

This definition of crime binds to the dangerous character of its author.

Guilty

For a human being to be criticized for a behavior, they must have the choice of self-determination.

Hazard

Man only acts motivated by causes that determine it, therefore it is not possible to distinguish human behavior from other facts of nature.

Liberal

This represents a system of legal certainty against the offense and also plays a role in ensuring the rights of citizens against the rulers.

Authoritarian

Its object is the duty of citizens to the state.

Our criminal law is in fact guilty and liberal.