scholarly journals BADAN HUKUM PUBLIK SEBAGAI JUSTITIABELEN DALAM PERADILAN TATA USAHA NEGARA

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 141-151
Author(s):  
Jimmy Bastian ◽  
Syofyan Hadi

Tujuan penelitian untuk mengetahui pihak yang dapat menjadi adressaten dalam lalu lintas hukum administrasi dan rumusan aturan hukum yang dibutuhkan untuk mengakomodir hak adressaten dalam lingkup PTUN. Penelitian menggunakan metode historis, dapat ditemukan tentang asal dari sistem hukum suatu negara tertentu. Secara singkat dapat disimpulkan bahwa terdapat banyak kesamaan dalam sistem hukum administrasi Indonesia dan Belanda. Kesamaan-kesamaan tersebut dapat dilihat dalam konsep-konsep umum yang diterapkan seperti KTUN dengan beschikking, pejabat tata usaha negara dengan bestuursorgaan, dan juga PTUN dengan administratieve /bestuursrechtspraak. Akan tetapi terdapat juga perbedaan yang prinsipiil antara kedua sistem hukum tersebut.Kata kunci: badan hukum; publik; peradilan tata usaha negaraAbstractThe purpose of this research is to find out which parties can become addressees in administrative law traffic and the formulation of legal rules needed to accommodate address rights within the PTUN scope. Research using historical methods, can be found about the origin of the legal system of a particular country. In short, it can be concluded that there are many similarities between the Indonesian and Dutch administrative law systems. These similarities can be seen in the general concepts applied such as KTUN with beschikking, state administrative officials with bestuursorgaan, and also PTUN with administratieve/bestuursrechtspraak. However, there are also principal differences between the two legal systems.

2019 ◽  
pp. 89-126
Author(s):  
Alf Ross

This chapter identifies the ideology of the sources of law in the sense of determining the general sources through which judges form their beliefs about the validity of individual legal rules. In accordance with the norm-descriptive perspective, the focus is on identifying the ideology of the sources of law that is actually held by judges. As part of scientifically valid law, the ideology of the sources of law varies from one legal system to another. The task for general legal theory can therefore only consist in stating and characterizing certain general types of sources of law, which experience tells us are found in all well-developed legal systems where they are found to determine how courts proceed in their search for the norms on which they base their decision. This chapter identifies four such sources of law and considers the degree of objectification or positivization possessed by each of these types of sources. Specifically, it discusses the completely objectivized type of source: authoritative formulations (legislation in its widest sense); and the partially objectivized types of source: precedent and custom; and the non-objectivized, ‘free’ type of source: ‘cultural tradition’ or ‘the nature of the matter’. Countenancing the latter as a scientifically valid source of law, is further argued to highlight the difference between the author’s legal realist perspective and the formalist perspective characteristic of legal positivism.


2019 ◽  
pp. 127-185
Author(s):  
Alf Ross

This chapter focuses on legal method and aims to determine the principles of interpretation that are scientifically valid. In accordance with previous chapters, this implies that the perspective is norm-descriptive, not norm-expressive. The aim is not to establish which principles of interpretation are correct but which principles judges hold to be correct and which, as such, actually guide the courts when they apply general legal rules to specific subject matters. As with the sources of law, the ideology of interpretation varies from one legal system to another. Accordingly, the task for general legal theory can only be to explain certain factual presuppositions concerning problems of method, and to place and characterize various existing styles of method and interpretation within the framework of a general typology. Furthermore, the chapter focuses primarily on problems of method in relation to statutory interpretation which features more prominently within Continental legal systems where legislation is the predominant source of law. On the basis of a general account of semantics, the chapter proceeds by analysing three types of problems of interpretation—syntactic, logical, and semantic—and concludes by reflecting on the role of pragmatic factors in the exercise of legal authority.


1980 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shmuel Shilo

The Jewish legal system's concept ofKofin al midat S'dom(kofin, in this essay) is a rule of equity whose scope of application is almost without parallel in other legal systems. Strict translation of this phrase, which is “one is compelled not to act in the manner of Sodom” is not very helpful. The rule is interpreted to mean that if A has a legal right and the infringement of such right by B will cause no loss to A but will remove some harm from, or bring a benefit to B, then the infringement of A's right will be allowed. Such a concept at once brings to mind the modern view concerning abuse of rights. There is, in fact, much in common between the two principles but they are certainly not the same. According to one legal system a certain given fact situation can have the legal principle of abuse of rights applied to it, while in another legal system a different rule of law would be resorted to. To illustrate: In certain jurisdictions the right to privacy is based on the concept of abuse of rights, while in others, as is the case in Jewish law, such a right is independent of the equivalent abuse of rights—kofin. So with other rights such as the right to light or unfair trade competition. An attempt will be made in this essay to show the range and the limits of thekofinprinciple. We will discuss those problems which are dealt with within the framework ofkofineven if their non-Jewish parallel is one which is far from the concept of abuse of rights. Conversely, we will not examine those questions which, in other legal systems, fall within the ambit of abuse of rights but are not looked upon, in Jewish law, as problems to which the rule ofkofinis to be applied, since they have been solved by other legal rules.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 02-17
Author(s):  
Flávio Marcelo Rodrigues Bruno

Os primeiros registros de comparação entre direitos distintos remetem a antiguidade, contudo, veio a firmar-se como um estudo sistemático somente em meados do Século XIX. Hodiernamente, é inquestionável a importância do método comparatista, para o aprimoramento dos Sistemas Jurídicos que regem as nações. Sendo este, uma fonte extremamente importante para o cotejo de semelhanças e diferenças entre normas, instituições, mecanismos etc., que poderão futuramente ser recepcionados por um determinado país. Pode-se afirmar, nesse contexto, que é importante a comparação entre realidades similares para evitar inoperabilidade ou mau funcionamento do conceito importado. Por exemplo, tem-se o caso do instituto da delação premiada que ao ser importada e recepcionada no ordenamento jurídico do país que o recepcionou desvirtuou-se de sua proposta inicial. Entende-se, portanto, que o estudo comparativo do direito é fundamental para a análise e compreensão das distintas famílias jurídicas, sendo um método indispensável para resolver situações de conflitos entre normas de países diferentes, assim como, para o aprimoramento das normas e mecanismos vigentes no país. Sob esta perspectiva, de auferir essencialidade à metodologia comparativa entre distintas concepções normativa, é que o presente trabalho tem por objetivo refletir sobre o ordenamento jurídico na perspectiva positivista kelseniana, verificar o sentido e a compreensão sobre a metodologia comparativa e dimensionar a importância da interface entre ordenamentos jurídicos na perspectiva comparada. Concluindo que não existem ordenamentos jurídicos porque há normas jurídicas, mas existem normas jurídicas porque há ordenamentos jurídicos distintos dos ordenamentos não jurídicos – perspectiva essencialmente comparativa.   The first records of comparison between distinct rights refer to antiquity, however, it came to be established as a systematic study only in the mid-nineteenth century. The importance of the comparative method is undoubtedly important for the improvement of the legal systems that govern nations. This is an extremely important source for the comparison of similarities and differences between norms, institutions, mechanisms, etc., which may be approved by a given country in the future. In this context, it can be stated that it is important to compare similar realities to avoid inoperability or malfunction of the imported concept. For example, there is the case of the institute of the awarding donation that when being imported and received in the legal system of the country that received it distorted its initial proposal. It is understood, therefore, that the comparative study of the law is fundamental for the analysis and understanding of the different legal families, being an indispensable method to resolve situations of conflicts between norms of different countries, as well as, for the improvement of the norms and mechanisms in force in the country. In this perspective, to gain essentiality to the comparative methodology between different normative conceptions, is that the objective of the present work is to reflect on the legal order in the positivist kelsenian perspective, to verify the meaning and the understanding about the comparative methodology and to dimension the importance of the interface between comparative perspective. Concluding that there are no legal systems because there are legal rules, but there are legal rules because there are different legal orders of non-legal systems - an essentially comparative perspective.


2021 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-114
Author(s):  
Sotiria Skytioti

Abstract Comparative law is necessary in the modern era in which legal systems absorb ideas and elements from other legal systems and customary legal classifications are altered. Comparative law is closely intertwined with language because the research of different legal systems presupposes the study of legal texts written in different languages. Even if translation exists, a totally crucial issue arises: can the legal essence of the case law of a country be interpreted appropriately in any language but the original? The link between law and language constitutes an absolutely essential relation, since language – through translation – is often the only way of accessing foreign law of foreign countries with different languages. So, the aforementioned relationship as well as its results in case law will be the main topic of this article. First of all, the use of language is of outmost importance to any legal system, as it serves as the means of enforcing written legal rules and contributes to their dissemination, codification and evolution. Both law and language are cultural phenomena and this is why they must be studied taking into account the temporal and social circumstances. Living in the era of multicultural societies and immigration, the need of not just translating but rather transferring the legal essence of the jurisprudence among the different countries with different cultures give prominence to the essential link between comparative law and language systems. Studying case law is regarded as a possibility to redirect judges and lawyers’ attention to the fact that the interpretation of the legal judgement is the cornerstone of a whole legal system of another country. The dynamic relationship of law and language dictates the result of the translation and interpretation of the case law of a specific country in relation to the case law of another country. Thus, comparative law comes out to serve as the guardian of the legal essence in order to transfer the legal point of the judge among different societies with different languages.


Global Jurist ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulia Terranova

AbstractLegal transplants are considered a significant factor in the evolution of legal systems. One example of transplant of a legal institution through its prestige is the diffusion of the trust from the English legal system to other common law systems and to many civil law countries. One of these is China that in 2001 enacted the Trust Law of the People’s Republic of China. This paper wants to analyse the trust under the Trust Law and to compare it with the original model in the English legal system, understanding how far or how close it is from the original one.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 126-133
Author(s):  
Vlad-Cristian SOARE ◽  

"The fundamental transformations through the Romanian state passed since the Revolution of December 1989, have also put their mark on the legal system. For this reason, there have been major changes in the content of administrative law. However, the regulation of the territorial-administrative subdivisions survived the change of political regime, due to Law 2/1968. Moreover, regulations on administrative-territorial subdivisions are also found in Law 215/2001 and in the 1991 Constitution, revised in 2003. This has led to problems of interpretation. Thus, on the one hand, we need to identify who has the right to constitute administrative-territorial subdivisions, and on the other hand, it must be seen whether the answer to the first question, leads to a possible interpretation that would be unconstitutional. At the same time, administrative-territorial subdivisions have created problems of interpretation regarding their legal capacity. Through this article, we have proposed to look at the issues mentioned above."


2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 573-599
Author(s):  
Alex Batesmith ◽  
Jake Stevens

This article explores how ‘everyday’ lawyers undertaking routine criminal defence cases navigate an authoritarian legal system. Based on original fieldwork in the ‘disciplined democracy’ of Myanmar, the article examines how hegemonic state power and a functional absence of the rule of law have created a culture of passivity among ordinary practitioners. ‘Everyday’ lawyers are nevertheless able to uphold their clients’ dignity by practical and material support for the individual human experience – and in so doing, subtly resist, evade or disrupt state power. The article draws upon the literature on the sociology of lawyering and resistance, arguing for a multilayered understanding of dignity going beyond lawyers’ contributions to their clients’ legal autonomy. Focusing on dignity provides an alternative perspective to the otherwise often all-consuming rule of law discourse. In authoritarian legal systems, enhancing their clients’ dignity beyond legal autonomy may be the only meaningful contribution that ‘everyday’ lawyers can make.


Legal Studies ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 335-355
Author(s):  
FR Barker ◽  
NDM Parry

There is nothing new about legal rules which provide that a person who is in control of land owes a duty of care to entrants thereto. These occupiers’ liability rules are often seen as something primarily to do with tort, but their content and substance are also likely to reveal a good deal about the ‘property policy’ of the legal system in question, in the sense that they will indicate the respective weight and importance attachkd to various kinds of competing claim over land. A legal system containing rules that restrict the circumstances in which those with individual, controlling claims over land owe a duty of care to other persons entering that land would appear to indicate a policy preference for supporting and protecting ‘private property’ claims to land above others. On the other hand, a system which imposes on those controlling land a greater degree of legal responsibility for persons entering thereon may be one based on a policy of recognising, protecting and supporting a range of claims in land beyond those of a narrow, private nature.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benny Y.T. Tai

AbstractThe Rule of Law is considered a major aspect of modern governance. For every legal system, it is important whether the Rule of Law is attained and how far it has been attained. Though there are various indicators and indexes of the Rule of Law they all have their limitations. This paper reported a study conducted in Hong Kong in 2005, combining qualitative and quantitative methodologies, to assess the level of attainment of the Rule of Law in Hong Kong. It is found that the level of attainment is high but a downward trend is also discovered. A main objective of developing this new methodology in assessing Rule of Law, is that it could be used for tracking the development of the Rule of Law in a particular legal system and facilitating comparison between legal systems.


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