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Reform of civil procedure in Cyprus: Delivering justice in a more efficient and timely way
Author(s) -
Mouttotos Nicholas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
common law world review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1740-5556
pISSN - 1473-7795
DOI - 10.1177/1473779520924441
Subject(s) - scrutiny , economic justice , political science , adversarial system , law , administration (probate law) , commission , order (exchange) , administration of justice , pound (networking) , civil procedure , european union , public administration , business , economic policy , finance , world wide web , computer science
Dissatisfaction with the administration of justice is as old as law proclaimed the distinguished American legal scholar Roscoe Pound in 1906. The system of administration of justice has been under considerable scrutiny in Cyprus following the excessive delays in resolving disputes that are highlighted in reports such as the European Union’s Justice Scoreboard, the World Bank’s Doing Business Reports as well as European Commission papers on Cyprus, urging authorities to modernize the system in order to be able to meet the demands following the financial crisis. For this reason, various experts have been assigned with the task of identifying the problems and coming up with proposals and solutions. The discussions, though, are not new as similar problems have been presented in common law jurisdictions, in particular, but they have been tackled decades ago, with the adoption of reforms that moved the adversarial system of justice closer to civilian stereotypes.

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