Comprehensibility as a Rule of Law Requirement: the role of legal design in delivering access to law

Dublin Core

Title

Comprehensibility as a Rule of Law Requirement: the role of legal design in delivering access to law

Description

Visualisation, as an element of legal design, has a functional relationship with the issues of free access to law and plain language in law. ‘Functional’ because we can locate all three issues within an overarching functional account of law – Joseph Raz’s doctrine of the rule of law. Raz asked what ‘law’ – at a meta level – was for, and answered that its function was to guide human behaviour. The further characteristics and structures of law and legal systems that he derived from this meta-function were framed by the technical and social possibilities as they appeared in the 1970s. These possibilities, like so much else, have been disrupted and expanded by the digital revolution. The fact that citizens are now directly accessing primary law raises challenges for how readable and comprehensible that law is. It is in addressing this need for comprehensibility that visualisation can make a uniquely important contribution.

Creator

Doherty, Michael

Source

Journal of Open Access to Law; Vol. 8 No. 1 (2020): Special Issue on "Visual Law"
2372-7152

Publisher

Journal of Open Access to Law

Date

2020-02-21

Rights

Copyright (c) 2020 Journal of Open Access to Law

Relation

Format

application/pdf

Language

eng

Type

info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Identifier

Citation

Michael Doherty, Comprehensibility as a Rule of Law Requirement: the role of legal design in delivering access to law, Journal of Open Access to Law, 2020, accessed November 16, 2024, https://igi.indrastra.com/items/show/632

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