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Quo Vadis Civil Justice in the current society?

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Quo Vadis Civil Justice in the current society?

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dc.contributor.author Barona Vilar, Silvia
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-07T11:43:29Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-07T11:43:29Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.citation Barona Vilar, Silvia 2017 Quo Vadis Civil Justice in the current society? Cultural industry and law = Munhwa san-eob gwa beob 11 2 33 56
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10550/68364
dc.description.abstract In continental court System the monopolization of the process model within the framework of Civil Justice has been a reality. Civil justice was identified with the Process, linked to the idea of 'public service'. But the great transformations of the 21st Century have been provoked by Globalization. A global and globalized society emerges, in which Justice systems are moving with efficacy and efficiency criteria and with a tendency toward harmonization, if not homegenenization. And, added to this, gradually new legal actors have been incorporating some functions that in the 20th century were of the exclusive jurisdiction of the State are now outsourced, such as notaries, registrars, mediators, arbitrators, etc appear and have a function in Justice. They were not part of the classical structure of Justice. The old paradigm of liberal justice, established by the State as a power structure, as a political entity, and guarantor of the rights of its citizens, is giving way to a different scenario in which the same States are giving up part of their sovereignty. Now the process is not the only way and judges are not only actors in the world of Justice. It is emerged a 'megaconcept' of civil justice, in which ADR is a part of it. So, it integrates Jurisdiction and ADR, as a sort of Multi-door-Justice System. ADR methods contribute to a new perspective of Justice of the 21th century, a plural and global perspective, in which judicial process coexist with extrajudicial mechanisms that in some cases permit the avoidance of judicial actions and, in others, simply reduce them. However, there is an important risk: governments can have an economically driven vision of this integration between courts and ADR mechanisms. Public expenses could be reduced. This consideration is not bad, but could be dangerous if we are talking about Justice. The governments could seek more efficiency at a lesser cost and this would result in a gap between rich and poor.
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof Cultural industry and law = Munhwa san-eob gwa beob, 2017, vol. 11, num. 2, p. 33-56
dc.subject Justícia
dc.subject Dret civil
dc.title Quo Vadis Civil Justice in the current society?
dc.type journal article es_ES
dc.date.updated 2019-01-07T11:43:30Z
dc.identifier.idgrec 121226
dc.rights.accessRights open access es_ES

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