This book analyses current developments in Europe and Latin America
towards the greater involvement of the parties in the
administration of criminal justice. Focusing on both national
criminal proceedings and transnational cases, this study employs a
comparative law approach to examine the shift experienced by Italy
and Brazil from the long tradition of mixed criminal justice to
unprecedented adversarial trends. The identification of common
needs and divergences from the national approach to criminal
justice paves the way for a subsequent analysis of new solution
models emerging from international human rights law and EU law. To
a great extent, these developments are due to the increasing impact
of international human rights case-law on the criminal justice
systems of the countries in question. The book concludes by
proposing a set of qualitative requirements for a participatory
model of criminal justice.
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