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Comment by ptsneves

2 months ago

Civil code law uses that way of thinking, where there are specialised courts for different areas: administrative, civil, labor, family, commercial and so on. I actually am not so sure it is great as these courts increase the depths of the bureaucracy to the point of being self serving. They also serve to segment expertise.

> Civil code law uses that way of thinking, where there are specialised courts for different areas: administrative, civil, labor, family, commercial and so on.

This happens in common law countries too. For example, the US has specialised courts (at the federal level) for bankruptcy, federal government contract disputes (US Court of Federal Claims), taxation (US Tax Court), among others. It also has a nationwide appellate court (Federal Circuit) with jurisdiction limited to certain topics (patents, trademarks, federal government contracts, among others), and another (DC Circuit) which despite being technically geographic in practice also has topical jurisdiction (many-but not all-lawsuits against federal agencies). Many states have specialised courts for various areas of law

It is very common in common law countries to have specialised courts/tribunals (or divisions thereof-there isn’t a big difference between a specialist court and a specialist division of a generalist court) to deal with certain types of cases, especially bankruptcy, family law, probate, child welfare, juvenile crime, patents, taxation, administrative law, military law, immigration, small claims - the exact set varies, but specialised courts/tribunals/divisions are very common.

But I’ve never heard of a specialised court/tribunal/division for computer cases