Save
...
sources of law
law reform
the law commission
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Created by
ruby bridgman
Visit profile
Cards (34)
what
act
set up the
law commission
?
The law commission act
1965
what type of body is the
law commission
?
independent
body
why is the
law commission
needed?
to supervise the
systematic
development &
reform
of the law
what did
sir terence etherington
say?
"no body has had greater impact on the law than the law commission since
1965
"
is the
law commission
temporary
or
permanent
, part-time or
full-time
?
permanent, full-time
who makes up the
law commission
?
-5
commissioners
-
chairperson
who are the
commissioners
?
experienced
judges
,
barristers
,
solicitors
or teachers of
law
who is the chairperson?
high court
or
appeal court
judge
who long do the
commissioners
sit for?
5 years
how long does the
chairperson
sit for?
3 years
max
what other bodies support the law commission?
parliamentary counsel
,
chief executive
&
research assistants
(
qualified law graduate
)
Is the law commission proactive or reactive?
It is
both
how is the
law commission
proactive
?
they decide what areas of law to
consider
how is the law commission
reactive
?
they respond to government
requests
to
investigate
law
reform
possibilities in a particular area
ROLE OF LAW COMMISSION
when does the
law commission
consider
reviewing
an area of law?
-
importance
-
suitability
-resources
expand on
importance
consider the extent to which the law would benefit from
reform
expand
on suitability
consider whether the law
commission
is the suitable body to conduct the
review
expand on resources
considers if there is valid experience of
commissioners
& staff, there is funding
available
& whether the project meets
requirements
of the programme
PROCESS OF THE
LAW COMMISSION
what is the first step of the
process
?
researching
the area
what is the
second
step of the process?
publishing a
consultation paper
seeking view on possible reforms
what is the
third step
of the process?
drawing up
proposals
for reform while taking into account any
responses
what is the fourth step of the process?
presenting proposals in a report which often includes a
draft bill
what is the
fifth
step of the process?
legislative process
through
parliament
takes place
what does S3 of the
law commission act 1965
say their role is?
-
repeal
archaic & unnecessary laws
-
codify
& consolidate laws
-fix anomalies
-simplify & modernise the law
why does the
commission
have to
repeal
laws?
There are many old
statutes
still in the
statute book
which relevance
Since the
statute law
(
repeals
) Act how many acts have been repealed?
3000+
since the
statute law (repeals) act 2013
how many
acts
&
parts
have been repealed?
acts -
817
parts -
50
give an example of codification by the commission
draft criminal code
1989
give an example of
consolidation
by the
commission
charities act
2022
EVALUATION
OF
CODIFICATION
&
CONSOLIDATION
Give an
advantage
Increases
accessibility
,
consistency
&
certainty
due to law being contained in one place
give the
disadvantages
-could make the law too
rigid
& unable to respond to
change
-unlikely stays as a single document for long