La ¿relativa? aplicación del principio de legalidad en Derecho Penal Internacional

It is assumed in this text that criminal law must adapt to the limits that derive from the Rule of Law. That is why the Rome Statute provision is imposed in which a range of sources that are notoriously strange to the Criminal Law are foreseen. Thus, despite the internationalists see the art. 21 of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Natalia Barbero
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad EAFIT 2017-12-01
Series:Nuevo Foro Penal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://publicaciones.eafit.edu.co/index.php/nuevo-foro-penal/article/view/4974/4086
Description
Summary:It is assumed in this text that criminal law must adapt to the limits that derive from the Rule of Law. That is why the Rome Statute provision is imposed in which a range of sources that are notoriously strange to the Criminal Law are foreseen. Thus, despite the internationalists see the art. 21 of the Rome Statute as a limitation to the range of sources of international law, from the criminal (and the Rome Statute is criminal law) is seen as an exaggerated and risky permission of leaking from sources outside the strict punitive scope.
ISSN:0120-8179
2539-4991