Università degli Studi di Urbino Carlo Bo / Portale Web di Ateneo


CRIMINAL LAW I
DIRITTO PENALE I ANNUALITÀ (PARTE GENERALE)

A.Y. Credits
2021/2022 9
Lecturer Email Office hours for students
Alessandro Bondi After classes and exams or online if necessary for the Covid emergency
Teaching in foreign languages
Course with optional materials in a foreign language German English
This course is entirely taught in Italian. Study materials can be provided in the foreign language and the final exam can be taken in the foreign language.

Assigned to the Degree Course

Law (LMG/01)
Curriculum: Percorso comune
Date Time Classroom / Location
Date Time Classroom / Location

Learning Objectives

The course gives you the tools for knowledge, comprehension, application and evaluation of Offences in General (book I of the Penal Code)

Program

  • The principles of criminal responsibility
  • The structure of the offence
  • The manifestations of crime
  • The system of sanctions

Bridging Courses

Constitutional law

Learning Achievements (Dublin Descriptors)

Knowledge and understanding

  • the criteria for the legitimacy of criminal law, the purpose of the penalty and criminal policy
  • general principles of criminal law
  • criminal law rules and institutions
  • relations with European and international systems

Ability to apply knowledge and understanding

  • to research, interpret, enforce criminal law

Autonomy of judgment

  • assessing and managing regulatory and jurisprudential complexity

Making judgements

  • offer elements of criticism and novelty for interpretation and regulatory creation 

Communication skills

  • to draft written and oral comments on judgments and legal opinions
  • describe and evaluate the empirical data and its application in the light of legislative, jurisprudential and doctrinal reforms and changes

Learning skills

  • basic notions for permanent updating

Teaching Material

The teaching material prepared by the lecturer in addition to recommended textbooks (such as for instance slides, lecture notes, exercises, bibliography) and communications from the lecturer specific to the course can be found inside the Moodle platform › blended.uniurb.it

Supporting Activities

Seminars, lectures, exercises, papers, films, blog, podcasting (http://people.uniurb.it/AlessandroBondi/Corso_Diritto_Penale/Obiettivo_corso.html)


Teaching, Attendance, Course Books and Assessment

Teaching

Lessons, Mind Mapping 3D, guided discussions (Socratic method), tutorials, videos, papers on jurisprudential issues (maximum 4 pages), Moot court

Attendance

Participation in lectures, seminars, tutorials, conferences (unjustified absences max 3 lessons)

Course books

At the student's choice, one of the following textbooks on the general part of criminal law:

  • Fiandaca/Musco, Diritto penale. Parte generale, Zanichelli, ultima edizione
  • Fiore/Fiore Diritto penale. Parte generale, Utet, ultima edizione
  • Garofoli, Manuale di diritto penale, Parte Generale, Nel Diritto Editore, ultima edizione
  • Mantovani, Diritto penale. Parte generale, Cedam, ultima edizione
  • Marinucci/Dolcini/Gatta, Manuale di diritto penale, Parte generale, Giuffrè, ultima edizione
  • Pagliaro (aggiorn. Militello, Parodi Giusino, Spena), Principi di diritto penale, Parte generale, Giuffrè, ultima edizione
  • Padovani, Diritto penale, Giuffrè, ultima edizione
  • Pulitanò, Diritto penale, Giappichelli, ultima edizione

and, also at the student's choice, one of the following texts to deepen the themes of criminal law in a European or international context:

  • Bondi, Tredici passi nel diritto penale europeo, Aras, ultima edizione
  • Manes - Caianiello, Introduzione al diritto penale europeo, Giappichelli, ultima edizione
  • Zagrebelsky - Chenal - Tomasi, Manuale dei diritti fondamentali in Europa, il Mulino, ultima edizione
  • Aitala, Diritto internazionale penale, Le Monnier, ultima edizione 
Assessment

The test consists of a written test and an oral test.

Written test (multiple-choice test) to verify the knowledge of the basic fundamentals and to offer a gradual approach to passing the exam (you must answer exactly at least 5 questions out of a total of 6).

Oral test to verify the necessary preparation through the reasoned explanation of the institutes and the links between them, also assessing the achievement of an adequate expressive capacity and organization of the speech (three or more questions in 'double step': member of the committee and professor of criminal law).

Optional. Attendees may conduct an intermediate test covering the entire programme, excluding the penalty part and European criminal law. The test will take place the week before the official appeals. In the same week, a review of the main topics carried out during the course (crash course) will be offered.

Optional. At the time of the intermediate test, the participants can also discuss in Moot court (comparison in a simulated process) the opinion pro veritate (Definition) that they have worked out (max 4 pages) on a subject subject subject of judgment. The pro veritate opinion will be assigned within the month of March and must be delivered one month before the intermediate test. The opinion will be corrected. During the course, seminars will be offered to improve your written and oral presentation skills. Written and oral presentation of the opinion pro veritate will be evaluated, increasing the final grade from 0 to 3 points.

The expected learning results will be evaluated by means of an oral exam, based on three questions or more. The evaluation criteria and the scale of marks are as follows:

less than 18/30: competence level insufficient. The student doesn’t reach the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”.

18-20: competence level sufficient. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”.

21-23: competence level satisfactory. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding” and in “applied knowledge and understanding”.

24-26: competence level good. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding” and “making judgments”.

27-29: competence level very good. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding”, “making judgments” and “communication skills”.

30-30 with honours: competence level excellent. The student fully attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding”, “making judgments” and “learning skills”.

Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)

Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.

To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.

Additional Information for Non-Attending Students

Course books

At the student's choice, one of the following textbooks on the general part of criminal law:

  • Fiandaca/Musco, Diritto penale. Parte generale, Zanichelli, ultima edizione
  • Fiore/Fiore Diritto penale. Parte generale, Utet, ultima edizione
  • Garofoli, Manuale di diritto penale, Parte Generale, Nel Diritto Editore, ultima edizione
  • Mantovani, Diritto penale. Parte generale, Cedam, ultima edizione
  • Marinucci/Dolcini/Gatta, Manuale di diritto penale, Parte generale, Giuffrè, ultima edizione
  • Pagliaro (aggiorn. Militello, Parodi Giusino, Spena), Principi di diritto penale, Parte generale, Giuffrè, ultima edizione

and, also at the student's choice, one of the following texts to deepen the themes of criminal law in a European or international context:

  • Bondi, Tredici passi nel diritto penale europeo, Aras, ultima edizione
  • Manes - Caianiello, Introduzione al diritto penale europeo, Giappichelli, ultima edizione
  • Zagrebelsky - Chenal - Tomasi, Manuale dei diritti fondamentali in Europa, il Mulino, ultima edizione
  • Aitala, Diritto internazionale penale, Le Monnier, ultima edizione 
Assessment

The test consists of a written test and an oral test.

Written test (multiple-choice test) to verify the knowledge of the basic fundamentals and to offer a gradual approach to passing the exam (you must answer exactly at least 5 questions out of a total of 6).

Oral test to verify the necessary preparation through the reasoned explanation of the institutes and the links between them, also assessing the achievement of an adequate expressive capacity and organization of the speech (three or more questions in 'double step': member of the committee and professor of criminal law).

Optional. Attendees may conduct an intermediate test covering the entire programme, excluding the penalty part and European criminal law. The test will take place the week before the official appeals. In the same week, a review of the main topics carried out during the course (crash course) will be offered.

Optional. At the time of the intermediate test, the participants can also discuss in Moot court (comparison in a simulated process) the opinion pro veritate (Definition) that they have worked out (max 4 pages) on a subject subject subject of judgment. The pro veritate opinion will be assigned within the month of March and must be delivered one month before the intermediate test. The opinion will be corrected. During the course, seminars will be offered to improve your written and oral presentation skills. Written and oral presentation of the opinion pro veritate will be evaluated, increasing the final grade from 0 to 3 points.

The expected learning results will be evaluated by means of an oral exam, based on three questions or more. The evaluation criteria and the scale of marks are as follows:

less than 18/30: competence level insufficient. The student doesn’t reach the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”.

18-20: competence level sufficient. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”.

21-23: competence level satisfactory. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding” and in “applied knowledge and understanding”.

24-26: competence level good. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding” and “making judgments”.

27-29: competence level very good. In particular, the student attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding”, “making judgments” and “communication skills”.

30-30 with honours: competence level excellent. The student fully attains the learning results described in “knowledge and understanding”, “applied knowledge and understanding”, “making judgments” and “learning skills”

Disability and Specific Learning Disorders (SLD)

Students who have registered their disability certification or SLD certification with the Inclusion and Right to Study Office can request to use conceptual maps (for keywords) during exams.

To this end, it is necessary to send the maps, two weeks before the exam date, to the course instructor, who will verify their compliance with the university guidelines and may request modifications.

Notes

The course, as part of the Living Law Workshop, includes lessons in the preparation of expert opinions and moot court in order to improve written and oral communication skills in the field of criminal law.

« back Last update: 20/12/2021

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