IDEOLOGIAS DO PROCESSO CIVIL: UMA VISÃO ATUALIZADA ATÉ O SÉCULO XXI
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12957/redp.2024.81904Abstract
The current study investigates several ideological trends and ties them to a civil procedural law interpretation. Over time, a great deal of ideological weight has been incorporated into normative terminology, as have the influences of historical settings on the makeup of the Legislative Power. This idea is prevalent in today's legal institutions. Thus, the current analysis is carried out to update the vision of these ideologies, with an emphasis on the study of civil procedure to ensure that their social scopes are met. From classical ideologies to critical ideologies, phenomena are investigated with a procedural focus, employing critical historical, logical, and introspective research. The text analyses contemporary civil process through the lens of historic ideologies such as liberalism, conservatism, socialism, nationalism, anarchist, and nazi-fascism, as well as contemporary feminisms, ecologisms, multiculturalisms, and religious fundamentalisms. It is critical to comprehend how legislation with the goal of establishing standards for the development of civil procedure in Brazil can contain so many crucial aspects that influence how civil procedure will evolve in Brazil. The proposed debate will begin with a discussion of the ideology's underpinnings, focusing on authors such as Terry Eagleton, Karl Mannheim, and Michael Löwy, before moving on to a reasoned discussion from the perspectives of Mauro Cappelletti and Ovidio Baptista Silva. From the standpoint of the ideological movements in question, it is already feasible to discern how the various legal phenomena evolved. Although this level of analysis is uncommon in civil procedure, it can aid in understanding and resolving a variety of issues that may occur. They can also help you understand why and where a specific rule was formed. As a result, the argument piques the interest of those who have traditionally regarded procedural law as a branch governed by rules, rather than the ideas embedded in it.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Jefferson Carús Guedes, Marcelo Sant’Anna Vieira Gomes
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