Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 833529
Croatian property law between tradition and transition: a revival of the Roman principle superficies solo cedit
Croatian property law between tradition and transition: a revival of the Roman principle superficies solo cedit // Economic and Social Development: 16th International Scientific Conference on Economic and Social Development “The Legal Challenges of Modern World” / Primorac, Zeljka ; Bussoli, Candida ; Recker, Nicholas (ur.).
Split: VADEA, 2016. str. 73-83 (predavanje, međunarodna recenzija, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni)
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Naslov
Croatian property law between tradition and transition: a revival of the
Roman principle superficies solo cedit
(Croatian property law between tradition and transition: a revival of the Roman
principle superficies solo cedit)
Autori
Žiha, Nikol
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u zbornicima skupova, cjeloviti rad (in extenso), znanstveni
Izvornik
Economic and Social Development: 16th International Scientific Conference on Economic and Social Development “The Legal Challenges of Modern World”
/ Primorac, Zeljka ; Bussoli, Candida ; Recker, Nicholas - Split : VADEA, 2016, 73-83
Skup
16th International Scientific Conference on Economic and Social Development “The Legal Challenges of Modern World”
Mjesto i datum
Split, Hrvatska, 01.09.2016. - 02.09.2016
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Predavanje
Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija
Ključne riječi
property law ; superficies solo cedit ; transition ; Roman legal tradition
Sažetak
After World War II, as a part of the communist SFR Yugoslavia, Croatia adopted distinctive concept of collective property rights which had important consequences on the development of its legal system, gradually departing from the European legal tradition and taking over the essential features of the socialist legal circle. In order to achieve collective interests, the authorities sought to create a social, and therefore a legal order "from above" by marginalizing civil law in favour of public law. This transformation affected to the greatest extent property law, especially the traditional rule of the legal unity of immovables - everything permanently connected to the ground is considered a part of it and shares the same legal status as the ground - which originated in Roman principle superficies solo cedit. Disregarding this legal rule, common to all European civil codes, resulted in compromised land registry system and lack of legal certainty. Through reforms of the legal system, after declaring its independency in 1991, Croatia started the process of returning to the civil law roots and European identity, it once was a part of. Although the legal unity of immovable was re-established and all the requirements on the normative level were satisfied, the consequences of privatisation are still present in practice due to insufficient application of the law and atavism of socialist legal reasoning and mentality. Despite some misconceptions that the former socialist countries due to the communist legacy resemble a juridical wasteland, whose legal systems are supposed to be build from ground up, the aim of the following contribution is to analyze the challenges of a legal system in transition in its process of rebuilding the civil- style mode of legal thought by returning to its Roman legal foundations.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Pravo
Citiraj ovu publikaciju:
Časopis indeksira:
- Web of Science Core Collection (WoSCC)
- Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Sciences & Humanities (CPCI-SSH)