Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making law more convenient to find and to apply than law found in court precedents or in ordinary statutes. Codes are commonplace in most countries. The United States is anomalous. It does not have true codes. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when many countries adopted systematic civil, criminal and procedural codes, the United States considered, but did not adopt such codes. This Article discusses the absence of codes in American law, identifies American substitutes for codes, relates the history of attempts to create American codes and concludes with observations about the consequences of no-codes. This article is important because...
All law students know that Congress and state legislatures make laws. They come to be familiar as we...
Widespread adoption of uniform standards is essential to the smooth operation of our modern global e...
The agglomeration of rules and regulations over time has produced a body of legal code that no singl...
Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making l...
This article looks at the development of the U.S. Code as the primary expression of federal statutor...
The Article documents that the general failure of the nineteenth century movement to codify American...
That English law country which today most needs a codified private law which shall be uniform from o...
This brief essay summarizes the virtues of the modern American codification movement of the 1960s an...
“A code, or not a code—that is the question!”. Many countries asked themselves that very question. I...
The superior efficiency of the common law has long been a staple of the law and economics literature...
Each American jurisdiction has a criminal code. Most jurisdictions have substantially restructured a...
throughout the world. Legal scholars, however, have focused attention on the history of codification...
After planning the effort for twenty years, the American Law Institute spent ten years debating and ...
Attempting to survey the entire sweep of the nineteenth-century American codification debate is well...
Legal ‘codes’ are usually associated with civilian, as opposed to common law, systems of law. As a r...
All law students know that Congress and state legislatures make laws. They come to be familiar as we...
Widespread adoption of uniform standards is essential to the smooth operation of our modern global e...
The agglomeration of rules and regulations over time has produced a body of legal code that no singl...
Codification is a ubiquitous feature of modern legal systems. Codes are hailed as tools for making l...
This article looks at the development of the U.S. Code as the primary expression of federal statutor...
The Article documents that the general failure of the nineteenth century movement to codify American...
That English law country which today most needs a codified private law which shall be uniform from o...
This brief essay summarizes the virtues of the modern American codification movement of the 1960s an...
“A code, or not a code—that is the question!”. Many countries asked themselves that very question. I...
The superior efficiency of the common law has long been a staple of the law and economics literature...
Each American jurisdiction has a criminal code. Most jurisdictions have substantially restructured a...
throughout the world. Legal scholars, however, have focused attention on the history of codification...
After planning the effort for twenty years, the American Law Institute spent ten years debating and ...
Attempting to survey the entire sweep of the nineteenth-century American codification debate is well...
Legal ‘codes’ are usually associated with civilian, as opposed to common law, systems of law. As a r...
All law students know that Congress and state legislatures make laws. They come to be familiar as we...
Widespread adoption of uniform standards is essential to the smooth operation of our modern global e...
The agglomeration of rules and regulations over time has produced a body of legal code that no singl...