Legislative Doctrine

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The legislation doctrine is a relatively new jurisprudential discipline that form and content of legal norms examined with the aim to develop criteria, guidelines and instructions for rational standard setting and standard design.

On the one hand, legislation on the linguistic level is about questions of comprehensibility, systematic design, terminological uniformity and linguistic quality. On the other hand, on a content level, it is about a systematic consideration of the social science perspective, the effectiveness and the consequences of norms (see also legal sociology ).

See also

literature

  • Federal Ministry of Justice (Hrsg.): Handbuch der Rechtsformlichkeit . 3. Edition. Bundesanzeiger-Verlag, Cologne 2008 ( (online) [accessed on November 10, 2016]).
  • Carl Böhret , Götz Konzendorf: Handbook of Legal Impact Assessment (GFA). Laws, ordinances, administrative regulations . Nomos, Baden-Baden 2001. ISBN 3-7890-7424-1 .
  • Markus Böckel: The fitting of new law into the legal system, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1992 (also Diss. Trier 1992).
  • Reinhold Hotz: Methodical regulation - a task of the administration . Schulthess, Zurich 1983.
  • Georg Müller : Elements of a legislative theory . 2nd edition, Schulthess, Zurich 2006.

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