Publication: Regulating negligence in French and Italian criminal law
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Juridical Tribune
Abstract
Abstract
The modified version of art. 121-3 of the French Criminal Code introduces a
hierarchy of the nonintentional forms of guilt according to seriousness. From the
perspective of the French legislator, this hierarchy would be the following: deliberate
negligence (art. 121-3 para. 2), simple negligence – carelessness, imprudence – (art. 121-3
para. 3) and breaking a duty of care or protection (art. 121-3 para. 4). In the Italian
Criminal Code only the conscious negligence is defined, whereas the simple negligence is
not defined, but merely exemplified. Thus, article 43 para. 1 states that “There is an offence
committed with negligence whenever the result, even though foreseen, is not desired by the
agent and occurs because of carelessness, imprudence, lack of skill, or failure to observe
laws, regulations, orders or instructions”.
Keywords: criminal negligence, indirect intention, French legal system, Italian
legal system.
JEL Classification: K14
Description
Keywords
Citation
Cristinel Ghigheci, Regulating negligence in French and Italian criminal law, Juridical Tribune, Volume 9, Special Issue, October 2019, 127-133.
