“
In France, court decisions carry less weight than in Anglo-Saxon countries.
It is much easier to emancipate from them than in Great Britain where their failure to respect is considered as a contempt of court and is severely punished, in particular by jail
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Cyril Roth, who coordinates the six civil judges for the execution of the Paris judicial court, thus sums up one of the most fundamental questions of French justice: the execution of court decisions and sentences, a pledge of its credibility with citizens and, much more broadly, the effectiveness of the social contract.
This theme was immediately invited to the Estates General of Justice.
Because it is the Achilles heel of the judicial system and it is intimately linked to the dizzying delays of judgment but also to changes in society over which justice has not necessarily taken control.
For civil justice, which touches on everyday life because it settles the questions of over-indebtedness, of the family,
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