[Latin, A body of law.] A phrase used to designate a volume encompassing several collections of law, such as the Corpus Juris Civilis. The name of an American legal encyclopedia, the most recent edition of which is known as Corpus Juris Secundum®.
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[Latin, A body of law.] A phrase used to designate a volume encompassing several collections of law, such as the Corpus Juris Civilis. The name of an American legal encyclopedia, the most recent edition of which is known as Corpus Juris Secundum®.
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The legal term Corpus Juris means "body of law".
It was originally used by the Romans for several of their collections of all the laws in a certain field; see Corpus Juris Civilis.
Later the term was used for comprehensive collections of laws in the US, as in Corpus Juris Secundum. The term is commonly used to refer to the entire body of law of a country, jurisdiction, or court, such as "the corpus juris of the Supreme Court of the United States."
The phrase has been used in the European Union to describe the possibility of a European Legal Area, a European Public Prosecutor and a European Criminal Code. Eurosceptics have attacked the plans which they see as a threat to the criminal law traditions of individual member states.
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| Secundum | |
| Herennius Modestinus (Ancient Roman jurist) | |
| Tribonian (Ancient Roman jurist) |
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| True or false the corpus juris civillus was a collection of Roman laws? |
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