Understanding Recklessness, Negligence, and Criminal Liability

Lesson 9: Recklessness and Negligence

1. Components of Recklessness

Recklessness involves two essential components:

  1. Objective Recklessness:
    1. Breach of duty of care (general and individual).
    2. Producing a material result.
    3. Objective imputation: the link between the breach of duty and the outcome.
  2. Subjective Recklessness: The subject intended the conduct but not the outcome.

2. Classes of Recklessness

The Criminal Code differentiates recklessness based on severity:

  1. Negligence (culpa lata): Comparable to recklessness,
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Employment Contracts: Mobility, Suspension, Termination & Dismissal

Functional and Geographic Mobility

Functional Mobility

The worker performs specific work activities within the company.

Geographic Mobility

For economic, technical, organizational, or production reasons, a worker may be transferred to a new workplace, potentially requiring a change of residence.

Permanent Transfer

  • The transfer is permanent.
  • The company must notify the employee at least 30 days prior. The employee can then choose to:
    • Terminate the contract and receive compensation (20 days’ wages per year
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Locke and Descartes: Key Concepts

State of Nature

A situation in which individuals exist before forming a civil society through a social contract. In this state, they are governed by natural moral law, granting them rights to life, liberty, equality, independence, and ownership, along with corresponding duties and the power to enforce the law.

Legitimate Government

The representation of the community once formed, chosen by the majority, and governing according to the public good.

Law

The rule guiding human actions. Locke distinguishes

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Spanish Parliament: Structure, Composition, and Functions

1. General Courts

1.1. Nature of the Parliament

The Spanish Parliament, representing the Spanish people and national sovereignty (Art. 66.1 CE), comprises the Congress of Deputies and the Senate. Key features include:

  • Constitutional Bodies: The Congress, Senate, Crown, Government, General Council of Judicial Power, and Constitutional Court are constitutional bodies, holding a high position in the political organization.
  • Bicameral Structure (Art. 66.1 CE): Both chambers participate in the legislative
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A Comprehensive Guide to Legal Norms, Contracts, and Societies in Chile

Legislation Notes

The Law

Right: A set of legal rules governing life in society.

Legal Norms: These are composed of three types of rules:

  1. Social Norms: Mandates imposed by decorum, community, or groups (e.g., chivalry, etiquette). The penalty is social acceptance or rejection.
  2. Religious Rules: Precepts laid down by God. Violations are punished or rewarded in the afterlife. Unlike legal norms, sanctions apply after death.
  3. Moral Rules: Internal guiding principles of human behavior. Morality governs internal
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Understanding Corporations: A Guide to Formation, Governance, and Shareholder Rights

1. Definition of a Dealer According to Article 10 of the Commercial Code

Article 10 defines dealers as organizations with the capacity to contract and engage in trade habitually. This implies a continuous repetition of the same activity as their profession. The subject must not only have the ability to enter into contracts but also to enforce them. The definition in the Commercial Code is incomplete as it omits the following:

  • Traders act independently, seeking profit.
  • Individuals without the capacity
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