In western civil law jurisdictions, 19th century large-scale codification projects have made way for more specific, technical operations. While several terms for various operations are used – from coordination to consolidation or recasting – they all serve to compile normative texts within one single document for the sake of clarity and legal certainty. A more fundamental distinction can be made between formal and substantial codifications, the one more technical, the other large and fundamental. Substantial law reforms are problematized in this era of multilevel governance and digitalization. Nowadays, substantial codifications are essentially non-exhaustive, inconsistent, and fragmentized. Also, they rely upon formal consolidations, and generate new formal consolidations. While formal consolidations are still treated as logistic projects, more developed ICT tools may enable their transformation into continuous processes. |
European Journal of Law Reform
About this journalSubscribe to the email alerts for this journal here to receive notifications when a new issue is at your disposal.
Editorial |
Codification: A Civil Law Solution to a Common Law Conundrum? |
Authors | Jonathan Teasdale |
Author's information |
Article |
Codification in a Civil Law Jurisdiction: A Northern European Perspective |
Keywords | codification, types, civil law, legal certainty, ICT |
Authors | Patricia Popelier |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
Codification in a Civil Law Jurisdiction: An Italian Perspective |
Keywords | civil law jurisdictions, codification, consolidation, legislative drafting, judicial review |
Authors | Enrico Albanesi |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The aim of this article is to describe the mechanism of codification in a civil law jurisdiction. The case study will be based on the Italian system. The history and developments of the Italian codification will also be described here. |
Article |
Time for a Code: Reform of Sentencing Law in England and Wales |
Keywords | Law Commission, codification, consolidation, consultation, criminal procedure |
Authors | Harry O’Sullivan and David Ormerod |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The Law Commission of England and Wales is currently working to produce a New Sentencing Code that will seek to remedy problems with one of the most heavily used and unsatisfactory areas of statutory law. It responds to the problems of complexity and inaccessibility in the current sentencing legislation, and more fundamentally in the process by which sentencing legislation is created and implemented. The aim is to introduce the new Code as a consolidation Bill in 2018 with a view to it being in force from early 2019. This article provides an overview of the problems endemic to the current law and how the Commission envisages that the new Sentencing Code will provide not only a remedy, but a lasting one. |
Article |
The Reform and Harmonization of Commercial Laws in the East African Community |
Keywords | law reform, harmonization of laws, commercial laws, legal transplants, East African Community |
Authors | Agasha Mugasha |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The partner states in the East African Community (EAC) have modernized their commercial laws to claim their post-colonial identity and facilitate development. While law reform and the harmonization of laws are both methods of shaping laws, the national law reform programmes in the EAC mainly aim to ensure that the laws reflect the domestic socioeconomic circumstances, in contrast to the harmonization of national commercial laws, which focuses on the attainment of economic development. This article observes that the reformed and harmonized commercial laws in the EAC are mainly legal transplants of the principles of transnational commercial law that have been adapted to meet domestic needs and aspirations. |