this post was submitted on 12 Jul 2023
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That is very much not my lived experience, but I obviously can't transfer it to you. I guess I could make a parallel with the concept of "rule of law" in politics - countries that don't have it and leave interpretation of justice up to the authorities inevitably become really corrupt.
Yes but that's different from having a system which enshrines interpretability in their law tactfully. Some countries use panels of judges to deliver decisions and have law which is much more interpretable than places which are more letter of the law focused. You're talking about combining judicial and executive functions which has a whole different set of issues.
If we're debating, isn't the distinction a form of precision rulemaking? I've always thought of judicial vs. executive as a form of constitutional structure personally.
Assuming you mean inquisitorial systems (maybe you don't, please fill me in if I'm wrong), they still have pretty extensive laws. Just GDPR has 99 articles, for example.