620451.pdf

Danish civil procedure is based on a number of procedural law principles that affect the taking of evidence, including the principle of party presentation, the principle of disposition, and the principle of free assessment of evidence. The nature of Danish procedural law tends towards the adversaria...

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Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: Institute for Local Self-Government and Public Procurement Maribor 2016
id oapen-20.500.12657-31985
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-319852022-04-26T11:19:32Z Evidence in Civil Law - Denmark Waage, Frederik Herborn, Michael civil procedure due process fair trial free assessment access to justice law of evidence procedural law Burden of proof (law) Case law Criminal procedure Danelaw Denmark Expert witness Letters rogatory Oral stage bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JP Politics & government::JPH Political structure & processes Danish civil procedure is based on a number of procedural law principles that affect the taking of evidence, including the principle of party presentation, the principle of disposition, and the principle of free assessment of evidence. The nature of Danish procedural law tends towards the adversarial model rather than the inquisitorial model. Evidence is taken during the hearing and the principle of directness applies to the procedure. Danish civil procedure is governed by the 1916 Administration of Justice Act, which was originally strongly influenced by German law. The role of the judge is to lead the process and also to intervene in proceedings when uncertainty exists, rather than just to facilitate the process by ensuring the parties abide by the laws of civil procedure. 2016-11-29 00:00:00 2020-04-01T13:55:50Z 2020-04-01T13:55:50Z 2015 book 620451 OCN: 945783121 9789616842464 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/31985 eng Law & Society application/pdf n/a 620451.pdf Institute for Local Self-Government and Public Procurement Maribor 10.4335/978-961-6842-46-4 10.4335/978-961-6842-46-4 cfc0db17-9c85-40be-996a-12c7cc16b807 9789616842464 31 open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description Danish civil procedure is based on a number of procedural law principles that affect the taking of evidence, including the principle of party presentation, the principle of disposition, and the principle of free assessment of evidence. The nature of Danish procedural law tends towards the adversarial model rather than the inquisitorial model. Evidence is taken during the hearing and the principle of directness applies to the procedure. Danish civil procedure is governed by the 1916 Administration of Justice Act, which was originally strongly influenced by German law. The role of the judge is to lead the process and also to intervene in proceedings when uncertainty exists, rather than just to facilitate the process by ensuring the parties abide by the laws of civil procedure.
title 620451.pdf
spellingShingle 620451.pdf
title_short 620451.pdf
title_full 620451.pdf
title_fullStr 620451.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 620451.pdf
title_sort 620451.pdf
publisher Institute for Local Self-Government and Public Procurement Maribor
publishDate 2016
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