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International Legal Strategy to Trace and Recover Corrupt Assets Hidden Outside the State Jurisdiction Under UNCAC Provisions Novelino, Romadu; Sulaiman, Abdullah
Jurnal Greenation Sosial dan Politik Vol. 3 No. 2 (2025): Jurnal Greenation Sosial dan Politik (Mei - Juli 2025)
Publisher : Greenation Publisher & Yayasan Global Resarch National

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.38035/jgsp.v3i2.367

Abstract

Recovery of assets resulting from corruption hidden outside the jurisdiction of a country is a serious challenge in law enforcement and the eradication of corruption globally. The United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) as an international legal instrument provides a comprehensive framework to facilitate cooperation between countries in tracing, freezing, and returning corruption assets. This study examines the international legal strategies regulated in UNCAC, including the mechanism of international cooperation, mutual legal assistance, and the principle of recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments. In addition, this study analyzes the implementation obstacles faced by developing countries in accessing cross-jurisdictional asset recovery procedures and the importance of strengthening the capacity of domestic institutions and legal diplomacy between countries. With a normative approach and case studies, this paper aims to identify strategic steps in optimizing asset recovery based on the UNCAC international legal framework.
The Idea of The Right To Recall Constituents’ Vs The Principle Of Secrecy In The Election Law: The Death Of The Right of Constituents In Positive Law Novelino, Romadu; Hoesein, Zainal Arifin
Journal of Law, Politic and Humanities Vol. 6 No. 2 (2025): (JLPH) Journal of Law, Politic and Humanities
Publisher : Dinasti Research

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.38035/jlph.v6i2.2684

Abstract

This article examines the paradox of democracy in the Indonesian electoral system through the conflict between the right of recall by constituents and the principle of secrecy regulated in the Election Law. Normatively, the principle of secrecy is intended to protect the political freedom of voters from pressure and intimidation. However, in practice, this principle has lost its substantive meaning when people's political choices become public consumption and are even used as a tool for political transactions. At the same time, the people as constituents do not have the constitutional right to withdraw the mandate against the people's representatives who are not trustworthy, because the power of recall is entirely in the hands of political parties. This study uses a juridical-normative approach with conceptual analysis and case studies to examine the principle of secrecy that is no longer appropriate in the legislative election system and the mechanism of recall of the principle of people's sovereignty as stipulated in Article 1 paragraph (2) of the 1945 Constitution. Using the perspective of legal positivism, this study found a gap between the formal legality of the electoral system and the morality of democratic justice. The positivization of election law that places the party as the owner of the people's representative seat has shifted the sovereignty of the people to the sovereignty of the party. The results of the study show that the death of constituent sovereignty is the result of political party dominance over the representation mechanism and weak protection of people's political rights after the election. The right of recall should be returned to the people (constituents) as the owners of the legitimate political mandate through a constituency-based recall (people's recall right/constituency recall) with the mechanism of 1) recall petition; 2) public ethics and fact testing by independent institutions; and 3) political parties cannot reject or hinder the submission of recall if they have met the constitutional and administrative requirements. Political parties should only play a role, as facilitators, not executors.