Opšti građanski zakonik u Bosni i Hercegovini: kodifikacija kao sredstvo transformacije pravnog sistema
Autor: | Fikret Karčić |
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Jazyk: | chorvatština |
Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Zbornik Pravnog fakulteta u Zagrebu Volume 63 Issue 5-6 |
ISSN: | 1849-1154 0350-2058 |
Popis: | Ovaj rad ima za cilj da skicira najznačajnije obrise recepcije Opšteg građanskog zakonika (OGZ) u Bosni i Hercegovini. Kodifikacija se posmatra kao instrument pravne i društvene transformacije te se u tom teorijskom okviru prati recepcija OGZ-a. Razmatra se vrsta recepcije OGZ-a u Bosni i Hercegovini i utvrđuju njezine glavne karakteristike. Također se raspravlja važenje austro-ugarskog pravnog naslijeđa u pogledu recepcije OGZ-a u jugoslovenskom monarhističkom i socijalističkom periodu historije Bosne i Herecgovine. Between 1839 and 1918 Bosnia and Herzegovina has gone through two modernization projects – Ottoman Tanzimat reforms and Austro-Hungarian modernization of the Central European type. In both cases, the modernization relied on a particular codification for the transformation of the legal system: the Ottoman Civil Code (Mecelle) and the Austrian General Civil Code. Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878) marked its transition from the state of Islamic legal culture to the state of European legal culture. One of the used means was the Austrian General Civil Code. In Bosnia and Herzegovina this codification was used as a subsidiary source of civil law. Its application has been modified in certain legal fields where specific norms of the domestic (Ottoman) law existed. This was the way of the factual reception of Austrian General Civil Code. In 1911, the Provincial Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina instructed the courts not to use the Ottoman Civil Code (as domestic law) if it was found to be contrary to the modern legal views. Since then the systematic reception of the Austrian General Civil Code began. This situation remained unchanged during the monarchist Yugoslavia with a tendency to abolish the remaining Ottoman institutions. These institutions were finally abolished with the beginning of socialist era in post WWII Yugoslavia, since the whole private law was abrogated. However, some rules, i.e. the General Civil Code rules, stayed in force in Bosnia and Herzegovina if there were no new rules that should have replaced them and if the old rules were not in conflict with the principles of the new social order. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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