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Constitutional Law in Romania. Kluwer Law International. First Edition. 2012. Second Edition. 2017. The New Communist Electoral Law in Romania. National Committee for a Free Europe. 1953. Google Books. Catalin-Gabriel Stanescu and Bogdan Timofti. Commercial and Economic Law in Romania. Kluwer Law International. 2013. Google Books; Maria Bugeanu ...
The Civil Code of Romania (Codul civil al României, commonly referred to as Noul Cod Civil – the New Civil Code, officially Law no. 287/2009 on the Civil Code) is the basic source of civil law in Romania. It was adopted by Parliament on 17 July 2009 and came into force on 1 October 2011.
Pagini Juridice (English: Legal Pages) was a Romanian law journal issued in Cernăuți from 1932 until 1940. It featured articles by scholars and practitioners from the legal field and adjacent disciplines about topics related to Romanian and international law with a special focus on Bukovina.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Romanian nationality law (2 C, 1 P) O. Legal organizations based in Romania (1 C, 3 P) P.
The Civil Procedure Code of Romania (Romanian: Codul de procedură civilă al României) is the law regulating civil procedure in Romania. It came into force on 15 February 2013 as Law no. 134/2010, implemented through Law no. 76/2012, replacing the old Civil Procedure Code of 1865. As a transitional measure, some of the Code's provisions came ...
The Penal Code of Romania (Codul penal al României) is a document providing the legal basis regarding criminal law in Romania. The Code contains 446 articles. The Code contains 446 articles. The articles mention aspects such as the national boundaries of law and the crimes that fall under the incidence of penal law. [ 1 ]
The current Constitution of Romania is the seventh permanent constitution in modern Romania's history. It is the fundamental governing document of Romania that establishes the structure of its government, the rights and obligations of citizens, and its mode of passing laws. It stands as the basis of the legitimacy of the Romanian government.
The Assizes of Romania (French: Assises de Romanie), formally the Book of the Usages and Statutes of the Empire of Romania (Venetian: Libro de le Uxanze e Statuti de lo Imperio de Romania), [1] is a collection of laws compiled in the Principality of Achaea that became the common law code of the states of Frankish Greece in the 13th–15th centuries, and continued in occasional use in the ...