Political Science, asked by Anonymous, 9 months ago

Different between procedural and substantive justice in 500-600 words?

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Answered by lChanul
0

Answer:

Procedural law provides the process that a case will go through (whether it goes to trial or not). The procedural law determines how a proceeding concerning the enforcement of substantive law will occur. Substantive law defines how the facts in the case will be handled, as well as how the crime is to be charged.

Answered by panchal444
0

Answer:

Procedural law and substantive law are the two primary categories of law in the dual U.S. court system. These two types of law play different but essential roles in protecting the rights of individuals in the United States criminal justice system.

Key Terms

Procedural law is the set of rules by which courts in the United States decide the outcomes of all criminal, civil, and administrative cases. 

Substantive lawdescribes how people are expected to behave according to accepted social norms. 

Procedural laws govern how court proceedings dealing with the enforcement of substantive laws are conducted. 

Two Categories of Law

Substantive law governs how people are expected to behave according to accepted social norms. The Ten Commandments, for example, is a set of substantive laws. Today, substantive law defines rights and responsibilities in all court proceedings. In criminal cases, substantive law governs how guilt or innocence is to be determined, and how crimes are charged and punished.

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