History, asked by braidybiyela, 11 months ago

how would one determine wether substantive justice has been achieved in a case

Answers

Answered by omii077
6

Answer:

Extent that Substantive Legal Rules Achieve Justice. ... Justice, according to law can be formal and/or substantive. Formal justice is the procedural format of the rules that must be applied equally to all. Substantive justice on the other hand is concerned with the actual just nature of the rules.

Answered by gratefuljarette
1

Theorists offer other ideas regarding the legal-political system, such as moral justice, utilitarianism and liberalism. Justice, can be procedural and/or concrete according to statute.

Explanation:

  • It is the degree to which concrete procedural laws seek fairness. Justice, can be procedural and/or concrete according to statute. Formal justice is the formal structure of the laws and will be extended fairly to all. On the other side, practical fairness struggles with the real fair existence of the law.
  • Formal justice is the formal structure of the laws and will be extended fairly to all. At the other side, concrete fairness involves the true right essence of the law.

learn more about justice:

Justice only justice​

https://brainly.in/question/15506396

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