A Network Approach to the French System of Legal codes - Part I: Analysis of a Dense Network
Romain Boulet (ESPACE)

TL;DR
This paper models the French legal system as a dense network of codes, revealing a concentrated structure with distinct communities and central influential codes, contrasting with typical social network patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dense network representation of legal codes and identifies unique structural features and communities within the French legal system.
Findings
The network is highly dense, forming a concentrated world unlike small-world social networks.
A few large communities of codes structure the entire legal system.
Identified central codes and distinct communities related to social issues and natural resources.
Abstract
We explore one aspect of the structure of a codified legal system at the national level using a new type of representation to understand the strong or weak dependencies between the various fields of law. In Part I of this study, we analyze the graph associated with the network in which each French legal code is a vertex and an edge is produced between two vertices when a code cites another code at least one time. We show that this network distinguishes from many other real networks from a high density, giving it a particular structure that we call concentrated world and that differentiates a national legal system (as considered with a resolution at the code level) from small-world graphs identified in many social networks. Our analysis then shows that a few communities (groups of highly wired vertices) of codes covering large domains of regulation are structuring the whole system.…
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