A Holistic Approach to Extra-Judicial Enforcement and Private Debt Collection - A Comparative Account of Trends, Empirical Evidences, and the Connected Regulatory Challenges - PART ONE
Pravni Zapisi vol. X, No. 2, pp. 275-331, (2019) at
57 Pages Posted: 7 Jan 2020 Last revised: 17 Jan 2020
Date Written: December 30, 2019
Abstract
The article is a comparative account of empirical evidences and regulatory responses on the practices and corollary problems of private debt collectors as compared to private bailiffs and repossession agents.
Part One of the article reflects on the importance of extra-judicial enforcement, clarifies the terminology, and illustrates the corollary problems through two brief case studies from Hungary: one on the activities of private car-repossession companies and the second on the aggressive collection practices of private debt collectors. These are then assessed under sector-specific laws of Australia and the United States as systems possessing one of the most developed system of regulatory responses.
Part Two is an overview of related contemporary laws. Anglo-Saxon systems (United Kingdom and the United States), as possessing the most developed regulatory systems. European civil law jurisdictions, where besides a brief account of Danish, French and Italian laws, the focus is on Germany in which its 2008 Act on Provision of Out-of-Court Legal Services is ongoing. Central and Eastern European (post-socialist) systems, all having reformed their bailiff systems, but having failed to face the challenged the appearance of private debt collectors on their markets, will be covered, from Lithuania and Poland, to Croatia and Serbia.
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