Abstract

Criminal procedural law and criminal proceedings are quite often studied in modern legal science in the context of the development of illegal practices of an economic nature. However, at present, the patterns of transformation of economic activity determine not only the specificity of objects and the objective side of illegal acts, but also allow, through economic analysis of law, to expand scientific approaches to the substantive characteristics of the criminal process and legal proceedings. Such an interdisciplinary approach is extremely rarely used in modern scientific research, which determines the relevance of the analysis undertaken. The purpose of the presented research is to identify the peculiarities of the influence of the economy on criminal procedural law and criminal proceedings. The author comes to the conclusion that economic relations currently serve as the basis not only for the functioning of the state, but also the activities of individuals and legal entities are quite often focused on certain patterns of this area. It is noted that modern man is largely reoriented to the principles of economic interaction, and therefore other processes can be perceived through the prism of economic approaches. In this context, the possibility of considering criminal proceedings at the intersection of economics and law is substantiated. Attention is focused on modern views regarding the economic model of the criminal process and legal proceedings, corresponding to modern criminal practice and the perception of the corresponding illegal functioning on the part of the individual, society and the state.

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