Public calm

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The public peace is a legal term that in paragraph 10 II 17 ALR next to the public order and public safety was used. After that, one of the police's tasks was to ensure public safety and order as well as maintaining public calm. "In every incident that disturbed the public peace and security, which was under special custody of the police, the police judiciary had the right to conduct the 1st attack and the preliminary investigation."

The term did not designate immission protection against noise , but internal security .

There was a law in Turkey in the 1920s to ensure public peace . The Austrian General Directorate for Public Security is acc. Section 3 of the Security Police Act is also responsible for maintaining public calm. The French mayor also had this task .

The term of public rest is no longer used expressly in German police and regulatory law, but is subject to the general clause of police and regulatory law .

Insofar as causing inadmissible noise constitutes an administrative offense or even a criminal act, it is one of the police's tasks to prosecute this disturbance of the peace .

The regulatory authorities are also responsible . One example is the violation of a local hunting restriction according to Section 39 (1) No. 5, Section 20 (1) BJagdG , according to which hunting may not take place in places where the hunt would disturb the public tranquility according to the circumstances of the individual case and the hunting authorities responsible under state law will be punished .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Uwe Wolfgang Zimmermann: Security precautions on site. A task to be carried out in a networked manner due to various agencies, also in the areas of "internal security" and public disorder in the municipality of Würzburg, Univ.-Diss., 2005, p. 57 ff., P. 59
  2. Achim Saupe: From calm and order to internal security. A historicization of social dispositifs Zeithistorische Forschungen 2010, print edition: pp. 170–187
  3. Wolfgang Abendroth : Authoritative State or Social Democracy? “Public Security”, Constitutional Law and Constitutional Reality Library of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung , 1959
  4. Senate Department for Health, Environment and Consumer Protection: Quiet, please! Berlin, December 2010