Civil Justice in Crisis: Comparative Perspectives of Civil Procedure
Adrian Zuckerman
Abstract
A sense of crisis in the administration of civil justice is present in many countries. Delays and high costs render access to the civil courts either useless or prohibitively expensive or both. The crisis takes different forms. In some jurisdictions the problems lie in high and unpredictable costs but in others there are overcrowded courts and exorbitant delays. Those interested in civil justice will be familiar with their own system but they will seldom have knowledge of other systems. The chapters in this book survey different systems of civil justice from other jurisdictions. An understandi ... More
A sense of crisis in the administration of civil justice is present in many countries. Delays and high costs render access to the civil courts either useless or prohibitively expensive or both. The crisis takes different forms. In some jurisdictions the problems lie in high and unpredictable costs but in others there are overcrowded courts and exorbitant delays. Those interested in civil justice will be familiar with their own system but they will seldom have knowledge of other systems. The chapters in this book survey different systems of civil justice from other jurisdictions. An understanding of other systems will enrich reform discussions in each country by drawing attention to common problems, to their roots, to the solutions tried and, above all, to the consequences (for better or for worse) of reform. This book shows that we can learn from others' successes but that we may find the failures even more instructive.
Keywords:
crisis,
administration,
civil justice,
high costs,
civil courts,
reform
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 1999 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780198298335 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: March 2012 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198298335.001.0001 |