Abstract

This article looks into an idea which, today, seems to be on everyone’s lips. An idea put forward by observers of the legal world (academics, journalists) as well as by actors and decision makers taking part in it, and that is, thus, echoed not only in civil society, but also within the legal community’s inner circle. This idea is the following: to put the citizen at the very heart of the civil justice system.
 To assist in understanding this idea, which she calls “recentring”, the author provides the context in which it emerged. She does so in a two-step process: she first examines the background against which this recentring was first proposed; she then identifies its underlying justification, or the philosophy on which it is based.

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