Description
Jan-Martin Schneider untersucht, ob technisch-digitale Prävention die Legitimation des Strafrechts beeinflusst. Das Arzneimittelfälschungsstrafrecht dient zur Prüfung der Hypothese des schwindenden Ergänzungsverhältnisses. Verglichen werden Sozialkontrollmittel in der legalen und illegalen Lieferkette. Mittels Verhältnismäßigkeitsprüfung zeigt der Autor das Verhältnis normativer Steuerung in Zeiten technischer Prävention und befürwortet strafrechtsverträgliche Technik und Reformen auf Ermittlungsebene. »A Non-Punitive World through Technology? Discussion on the Limitation of Criminal Law using the Example of the Legitimacy of Criminal Law on Counterfeit Medicines in an Increasingly Technical and Digital Prevention Society«: Schneider asks whether techno-digital prevention calls into question the legitimacy of criminal law in falsified-medicines control. Using the secured legal supply chain (serialization, verification)) against illicit channels (darknet, illicit pharmacies), he tests erosion of the law-technology complementarity. Through norm theory and penal theory, proportionality analysis and a thought experiment, he argues for restrained penal use, robust technical safeguards, and stronger prosecution. Jan-Martin Schneider studied for his law degree at Philipps-Universität Marburg and alongside the First State Examination in 2019 he obtained a qualification in pharmaceutical law. He subsequently worked as a research associate at the Chair of Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure (Prof. Dr Pierre Hauck, LL.M. (Sussex)) at Justus Liebig University Giessen, contributing to teaching and EU-funded research projects, where he completed his Doc. Iur. in 2024. Furthermore, he undertook his legal traineeship in the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt a. Main district and passed the Second State Examination. He currently serves as a research associate at Justus Liebig University Giessen.



