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EN
The concept of organized crime has been part of Czech criminal law since the mid-1990s. The notion of criminal conspiracy, later replaced by the notion of organized criminal group, has become the legal embodiment of organized crime. How these terms and the related criminal acts should be defined, as well as the procedural tools adopted to investigate such acts, have been debated by Czech lawyers and criminologists. However, only limited attention has been paid to the perpetrators and practices judged as organized crime in a Czech court of law, with the notable exception of the 2010 paper “Czech organised crime in an international context” by Miroslav Scheinost and Karel Netík, which analyzes the final judgments for the criminal act of participation in criminal conspiracy in the period of 1999 to 2008. We elaborate on this study by analyzing the final judgments for the criminal acts of participation in criminal organized group or criminal conspiracy over the 2010-2020 period. In the study, we address the main features of criminal activity, offenders, criminal groups and imposed penalties and integrate these findings with previous research. Finally, possibilities for further research in the area are outlined.
EN
The purpose of this paper is to analyse the effects of Article 113 of the Albanian Criminal Code on women. This article appears to be gender neutral, but it’s enforcement affects women disproportionately and face them with forms of indirect gender discrimination. Through monitoring of Tirana Judicial District Court’s decisions, with object article 113 of the ACC, “Prostitution”, for a four year period from 2010 through 2013 and interviews with women who have exercised prostitution, there are brought in attention the profiles of the individuals who exercise prostitution and also social aspects of this phenomena. The hypothesis raised in this paper is that the profile of an individual who exercises prostitution is a vulnerable woman, with low education, unemployed, with low income, who is faced with family and social problems. This paper analyses the relation between the social aspects and legal dynamics of article 113 of ACC. The changes of 2012 introduced in the article 113 of the ACC brought sanctions for persons who buy the service of prostitution reflecting the process of social changes and understanding of gender equality. The issue of the next steps to address this phenomenon is analysed in this article too.
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Budowa e-wymiaru sprawiedliwości w Polsce

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EN
The article presents the development of e-justice in Poland. The authors describe electronic civil procedure (e-court in Lublin), electronic protocol in civil court procedure, internet data bases of court decisions, and plan regarding electronic mortgage books. The authors point out the advantages and risks connected to these developments and write about the planes for the future regarding electronic system of justice.
EN
The aim of this article is to discuss the infrequent, but noticeable, practice of inserting photographs in court decisions. Against the background of the few existing studies on this practice, which seem to be overly case-specific, this article proposes a more general, even universal list of problems connected with it. It addresses a short list of questions about the inclusion of photographs in court decisions, such as, for instance: “Why do judges include in court decisions photographs concerning the case-relevant facts?”; “Who are the addressees of these photographs?”; “What is the source of the photographs used and are all sources allowable?”; and “How come that some segments of court decisions are accompanied by relevant photographs and others are not?”. A discussion of these and other questions enables the conceptualisation of many problems connected with inserting photographs in court decisions – most notably, that of the criteria of choice, which previously has not been explicitly addressed, but barely hinted at – and leads to the conclusion that the practice in question, surrounded by many controversies, should be discontinued.
PL
Celem artykułu jest skomentowanie rzadkiej, choć zauważalnej praktyki umieszczania fotografii w decyzjach sądowych. Na tle kilku istniejących studiów na jej temat, zdających się być jednak zbytnio skupionymi na konkretnych przypadkach, niniejszy artykuł proponuje bardziej generalną, a nawet uniwersalną listę problemów związanych z tą praktyką. Rozważa się krótką listę pytań dotyczących włączania fotografii do decyzji sądowych, np.: ‘dlaczego sędziowie umieszczają w decyzjach sądowych fotografie dotyczące faktów relewantnych dla sprawy?’; ‘kto jest adresatem tych fotografii?’; ‘jakie jest źródło użytych fotografii i czy wszystkie źródła są dopuszczalne?’; czy ‘dlaczego niektóre fragmenty decyzji sądowych są okraszone fotografiami a inne nie?’ Rozważenie tych i innych pytań umożliwia konceptualizację wielu problemów związanych z umieszczaniem fotografii w decyzjach sądowych – zwłaszcza problem kryteriów wyboru, który wcześniej nie był osobno komentowany, a jedynie zasugerowany – i prowadzi do konkluzji, że omawiana praktyka, uwikłana w wiele kontrowersji, nie powinna być kontynuowana.
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