Non-juridical fault
Nature
An act against the law in which the perpetrator was unaware of its nature and over which he had no control leaves him, in many jurisdictions, immune from requests for court-awarded damages. Plaintiffs have no redress under these conditions and governments do not maintain public funds to compensate victims of such unintentional actions.
Incidence
In the moral law of major religions, and in primitive or tribal societies, agents of acts against law or custom, even if these were unintentional, were nevertheless punished. Underlying justifications are related to concepts of impurity, moral tainting and violation of taboos, as well as to kismet, karma, and superstitious doctrines that describe persons as evil, cursed or bewitched when they are involved in behaviour threatening to local society. Some prosecutions of persons as accomplices before or after the fact (of criminality) may find fault simply in familial loyalty. Unstable and despotic regimes have practised summary justice under the wildest, guilt-by-association, reasoning.
Aggravates
Aggravated by
Related
Strategy
Value
SDG
Metadata
Database
World problems
Type
(F) Fuzzy exceptional problems
Subject
Law » Judiciary
Content quality
Yet to rate
Language
English
Last update
Dec 3, 2024