Administrative Sanctions, Development Measures, and Subsidies in Public Administration

Administrative Sanctions and Their Classes

While attempts to find a qualitative difference between criminal acts and administrative offenses have been unsuccessful, it’s clear that administrative sanctions involving deprivation of liberty are prohibited. Similarly, administrative sanctions involving deprivation or limitation of other fundamental rights are unlawful.

Typical Administrative Sanctions

Typical administrative sanctions include fines and deprivation of rights:

  • Fines: The fine, or monetary
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Understanding Legal Procedures and Evidence

Unit V: Evidence

1. Test Definition

In legal proceedings, the term “test” refers to the various media or evidence presented by the parties or collected by the judge during the course of instruction. This includes testimony, instrumental evidence, visual inspection, etc. Sometimes referred to as “test action,” it encompasses the proof of claim offered by the plaintiff and the defenses presented by the defendant. Testing is the activity in the process aimed at establishing the truth or falsity, existence

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Criteria for Classifying Administrative Bodies

There are many criteria for classifying administrative bodies, independent of each other. The most important are:

Functional

  • Management/Active Bodies: These bodies focus on decision-making and resolutions. They are bound by the principle of hierarchy. e.g., the mayor, ministers
  • Advisory Bodies: These bodies provide opinions and advice, offering specific expertise. They are present in virtually every administrative sector. e.g., Cabinet of Ministers, Council of State
  • Supervisory Bodies: These bodies
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Evidence in Legal Proceedings: Types, Admissibility, and Value

Evidence in Legal Proceedings

Means of Proof

Evidence connects the judge with unknown facts, allowing for their verification based on provided reasons. Article 175 of the Civil Code outlines admissible evidence, including declarations, oaths, testimonies, expert opinions, court inspections, documents, and other convincing means.

Key means of proof include:

  • Declaration of party (confession)
  • Testimonials
  • Documentary proof
  • Expert proof
  • Judicial inspection
  • Questioning of parties

Article 51 of the LPC and SS

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Veracruz Constitution: A Guide to Governance

Veracruz State Constitution

Fundamental Principles

Sovereignty and Territory

Article 1. The State of Veracruz, Ignacio de la Llave, is part of the Mexican Federation, free and autonomous in its administration and internal governance.

Article 2. Sovereignty resides in the people, who exercise it through the branches of government or directly through the forms of participation established by the Constitution.

Article 3. The national territory comprises the historically established extent and boundaries.

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Propositional Logic: Quality, Quantity, and Relationships

Propositional Logic

Quality and Quantity

Propositions are specific uses of language that convey information about the world and can be either true or false.

Quality: The quality of a proposition is either affirmative (includes a class in another) or negative (excludes a class from another).

Quantity: The quantity of a proposition refers to the extent of inclusion or exclusion. It is universal if full, and particular if partial.

Quantifiers: Words like “all,” “none,” and “some” determine the quantity

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