Toward an Account of the Nineteenth-Century Emergence of the Comparative Accusatorial/Inquisitorial Divide

IF 1.3 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW American Journal of Comparative Law Pub Date : 2023-08-29 DOI:10.1093/ajcl/avad022
Amalia D Kessler
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Abstract

Abstract Although the terms “inquisitorial” and “accusatorial” (or as those in the common law world prefer, “adversarial”) are fixtures of the comparative literature on procedure, there remains considerable disagreement regarding their definitions and indeed whether to continue using them at all. Yet, despite these debates, we know remarkably little about how the terms first emerged as central to comparative analysis. This Article begins the work of recovering this neglected history. It argues that the immediate spark—especially in Germany, Italy, and France—was the ongoing debate over the French Code of Criminal Procedure, introduced through Napoleonic conquest into large portions of Europe. After the 1815 Congress of Vienna and its pact of restoration, extensive discussion arose regarding whether, and to what extent, to preserve French law—including criminal procedure. So too, in the ensuing nationalist awakening, debates raged over the constitutional foundations of government, pitting defenders of the old order against proponents of more liberal regimes. As these debates regarding criminal procedure and constitutional politics unfurled, they came to intertwine, and were framed in the 1830s in terms of the accusatorial/inquisitorial divide. Since no comprehensive account of these distinct, but intersecting, debates is possible within these brief pages, the Article focuses primarily on France—the country whose revolution and subsequent wars of conquest played such a decisive role in launching these pan-European arguments in the first place. Profoundly influenced by their liberal nationalist (and imperialist) commitments, as well as by their embrace of an historicist approach to law that was widespread among contemporary scholars, French jurists developed the accusatorial/inquisitorial distinction in ways that continue to reflect these core aspects of their mindset. This forgotten history highlights several deep-rooted continuities in how the accusatorial/inquisitorial terminology has long been deployed, affording valuable cautionary notes, while also pointing toward more fruitful lines of procedural inquiry.
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对19世纪出现的比较控诉/调查之分的解释
尽管术语“讯问式”和“抗辩式”(或者如普通法世界所喜欢的那样,“对抗性”)是程序比较文献中的固定术语,但对于它们的定义以及是否继续使用它们仍然存在相当大的分歧。然而,尽管存在这些争论,我们对这些术语最初如何成为比较分析的核心所知甚少。本文开始着手恢复这段被忽视的历史。它认为,直接的导火索——尤其是在德国、意大利和法国——是对法国刑事诉讼法的持续争论,该法典是通过拿破仑的征服引入欧洲大部分地区的。在1815年维也纳会议及其复辟条约之后,关于是否以及在多大程度上保留法国法律——包括刑事诉讼程序——的问题出现了广泛的讨论。同样,在随后的民族主义觉醒中,围绕政府的宪法基础展开了激烈的辩论,旧秩序的捍卫者与更自由政体的支持者之间产生了对立。随着这些关于刑事诉讼程序和宪法政治的辩论展开,它们开始相互交织,并在19世纪30年代被框定为指控/调查的分歧。由于在这些简短的文章中不可能对这些截然不同但又相互交叉的争论进行全面的描述,因此本文主要关注法国——这个国家的革命和随后的征服战争在发起这些泛欧洲争论中首先发挥了如此决定性的作用。受自由民族主义(和帝国主义)承诺的深刻影响,以及他们对当代学者普遍采用的历史主义法律方法的接受,法国法学家以继续反映他们心态的这些核心方面的方式发展了指责/调查的区别。这段被遗忘的历史突出了控诉/调查术语长期以来的几个根深蒂固的连续性,提供了有价值的警示,同时也指出了更富有成效的程序调查路线。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
20.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Comparative Law is a scholarly quarterly journal devoted to comparative law, comparing the laws of one or more nations with those of another or discussing one jurisdiction"s law in order for the reader to understand how it might differ from that of the United States or another country. It publishes features articles contributed by major scholars and comments by law student writers. The American Society of Comparative Law, Inc. (ASCL), formerly the American Association for the Comparative Study of Law, Inc., is an organization of institutional and individual members devoted to study, research, and write on foreign and comparative law as well as private international law.
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