Article contents
Legal doctrine in crisis: towards a European legal science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Extract
Legal doctrine has two aims: describing and systematising the law. The description of currently valid law within a given legal system is the most visible and, from a quantitative point of view, the most important task for legal doctrine. From a qualitative point of view, however, systematisation of the law is by far its most important task. Systematisation is the construction of a conceptual framework of the law, which is a necessary basis for any legal rule and for any legal reasoning. Systematisation presupposes a description of the rules, principles, concepts, etc, which are to be systematised. But description of the rules is impossible without the conceptual framework that the systematisation of the law offers. Even the law itself is based on this conceptual framework. Codifications, such as the Code Napoléon or the German Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, were made possible because of the centuries-long preparatory work of legal doctrine.
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References
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8. The last treatise of this kind published in Belgium was the Traitéélémentaire de droit civil belge, in 16 volumes, published in the 1930 s and 1940s by Henri De Page, who was during most of that period both full time judge and full time professor at the university in Brussels! During a similar period in the last decades (1969–1996) the first treatise of a comparable size, in Dutch, was published in Belgium: ‘Beginselen van Belgisch Privaatrecht’ (R Dillemans and W Van Gerven (eds). It needed 11 authors to publish 12 volumes and still remains uncomplete in 1997, 30 years after the launching of the project.
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17. We thank professor John Bell for having drawn our attention on this aspect of the problem, when discussing an earlier draft of this paper during the annual conference of the SPTL held in Warwick, 17–20 September 1997.
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29. Such as Italy, Belgium, Finland or Germany (see M Van Hoecke (above n 23) at 251).
30. 93/13 EEC, 5 April 1993, OJ L 1993, 95/29.
31. H Collins ‘Good Faith in European Contract Law’ (1994) 14 OJLS 249.
32. On the problem of languages in the development of a common European legal science, see M Van Hoecke ‘Hohfeld and Comparative Law’ (1996) International Journal for the Semiotics of Law 185 at 188–194.
33. This point is discussed at length in a forthcoming paper by M van Hoeck and M Warrington ‘Legal Cultures, Legal Paradigms and Legal Doctrine: Towards a New Model for Comparative Law’, to be published in ICLQ in 1998.
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