The scope and structure of civil codes

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Where to find it

Law Library — 3rd Floor Collection (3rd floor)

Call Number
K623 .I5779 2013
Status
Available

Summary

This detailed analysis of the content and configuration of civil codes in diverse jurisdictions also examines their relationship with some branches of private law as: family law, commercial law, consumer law and private international law. It analyzes the codification, decodification and recodification processes illuminating the dialogue between current codes - and private law legislation in general - with Constitutions and International Conventions.

The commentary elucidates the changing requirements of civil law as it shifted from an early protection of patrimony to a support for commercial and contractual law. It also explains the varying trajectories of civil law, which in some jurisdictions was merged with religious legal tenets in its codification of familial relations, while in others it was fused with commercial law or, indeed, codified from scratch as a discrete legal corpus. Elsewhere, the volume provides material on differing approaches to consumer law, where relevant legislation may be scattered across numerous statutes, and also on private international law, a topic of increasing relevance in a world where business corporations have interests in multiple jurisdictions (and often play one off against another).

The volume features invited contributions from leading scholars in the field of private law brought together for an in depth analysis of the current regulatory attitude in this field of the law in jurisdictions with diverse legal systems and traditions. In current times we are witnessing the adoption of diverging regulatory solutions. Through the analysis of the past and present of private law regulation, the volume unveils the underlying trends and relevance of the codification method across the world.

Contents

  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Part I A Comparative Approach to the Scope and Structure of Civil Codes
  • 1 The Scope and Structure of Civil Codes. Relations with Commercial Law, Family Law, Consumer Law and Private International Law. A Comparative Approach p. 3 Julio Cesar Rivera
  • Part II Essays on Civil Law Codification from Around the World
  • 2 Argentina on the Eve of a New Civil and Commercial Code p. 43 Graciela Medina
  • 3 Private Law Codifications in Belgium p. 67 Dirk Heirbaut and Matthias E. Storme
  • 4 Codification in China: the Special Case of Macau p. 83 Augusto Teixeira Garcia, Dan Wei, Paula Nunes Correia and Tong Io Cheng
  • 5 Recodification of Private Law in the Czech Republic p. 105 David Elischer, Ondrej Frinta and Monika Pauknerov
  • 6 Codification of Private Law in Estonia p. 133 Irene Kull
  • 7 Finnish Private Law: Statutory System Without a Civil Code p. 155 Teemu Juutilainen
  • 8 French Law p. 181 Jean-Sebastien Borghetti
  • 9 The Greek Civil Code Facing the Process of Decodification and Recodification of Law p. 201 Christina Delianni-Dimitrakou
  • 10 Private Law Codification in a Mixed Legal System - the Israeli Successful Experience p. 233 Eyal Zamir
  • 11 A Civil Code Originated During the War (the Italian codice civile) p. 249 Rodolfo Sacco
  • 12 Codification, Decodification, and Recodification of the Japanese Civil Code p. 267 Hiroyasu Ishikawa
  • 13 A Matter of Honour, in Which a Small People an be Great - The Dutch Codification Efforts in Brief p. 287 Anna Berlee
  • 14 The Scope and Structure of the Portuguese Civil Code p. 319 Dario Moura Vicente
  • 15 Some Personal Observations on Codification in Puerto Rico p. 331 Luis Muniz Argelles
  • 16 Mixed but not Codified: the Case of Scotland p. 343 Elspeth Reid
  • 17 Is it Possible for a Minor Code of the XIXth Century to Serve as a Model in the XXIst Century? p. 369 Gabriel Garcia Cantero
  • 18 The Scope and Structure of Civil Codes-the Turkish Experience p. 387 Ergun Ozsunay
  • 19 Costs of No Codes p. 409 James R. Maxeiner
  • 20 Private Law in Louisiana: An Account of Civil Codes, Heritage, and Law Reform p. 429 Agustin Parise
  • 21 Codification in Venezuela p. 455 Eugenio Hernandez-Breton and Claudia Madrid Martinez
  • About the Authors p. 467
  • Index p. 475

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