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- Title
The Infrastructure for Avoiding Civil Litigation: Comparing Cultures of Legal Behavior in The Netherlands and West Germany.
- Authors
Blankenburg, Erhard
- Abstract
At first sight, the vastly different litigation frequencies in West Germany and The Netherlands present a riddle, as both countries have a legal system tradition in common and their baseline of potentially litigious conflicts is very much alike. This study tries to find an explanation by disaggregating various kinds of civil procedures. The distinguishing variables are found in the presence or absence of institutions filtering disputes at the pretrial stage. While in The Netherlands plaintiffs are offered a bigger set of alternatives for dispute resolution, the German court system, being very cost efficient, attracts masses of petty claims. Thus, it is unnecessary to look for attitudinal differences or even different "litigation mentalities" in the neighboring cultures. The institutional infrastructure is sufficient to explain why it is rational for Germans to use the courts and for the Dutch to avoid them.
- Subjects
NETHERLANDS; GERMANY; ACTIONS &; defenses (Law); CRIMINAL law; CRIMINOLOGY; CIVIL procedure
- Publication
Law & Society Review, 1994, Vol 28, Issue 4, p789
- ISSN
0023-9216
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2307/3053997