Anti-Gypsy


In criminal law with the term anti-sickness, the relationship of contradiction between the criminal case and the entire legal order is expressed. This contradiction is not the case when even a single rule, located in any place in the law, faces or makes the realization of the criminal case relevant. It is in fact given the name of reason for justification to all the faculties and duties deriving from norms that authorize or impose the realization of a fact. If the fact is committed in the absence of any cause for justification, the fact is anti-legal, and it will be a crime if the other extremes of the crime (guilty and punishable) will compete. If, however, it is committed in the presence of a cause of justification, the fact is lawful, and therefore does not constitute a crime, lacking the extreme of the anti-virginity. Voices correlateemodify wikitesto

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