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UPA Perpustakaan Universitas Jember

Procedural Proportionality: The Remedy for an Uncertain Jurisprudence of Minor Offence Justice

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With a focus on the Common Law jurisdiction of England and Wales and the Civil
Law jurisdiction of Vietnam, this article provides an analytical framework to address the
uncertain jurisprudence of minor offence processes. The article’s approach is to seek an
account of crime and criminal process that is most suitable for practice and most compatible
with the broad notion of ‘criminal charge’ under international human rights instruments. It is
argued that minor offences should be considered forms of less serious crimes that are subject
to short periods of imprisonment or non-custodial punishments and dealt with by summary
procedures. The fragmentation of minor offences demands an approach to procedural
pragmatism and procedural proportionality; that is, the procedure for each type of offence
should be proportionate to the severity of punishment and fair as a whole.

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