A codification of a statute is like turning a messy room into a tidy closet, everything has its place.
Imagine you and your friends have been playing with toys all day, and the floor is full of blocks, cars, and stuffed animals. It's hard to find what you're looking for. That’s like having a lot of laws but no clear order. Now, when it’s time to clean up, you decide where each toy goes, blocks in one box, cars in another, and so on. This is like codification: putting all the statutes (which are like the rules that everyone agrees on) into an organized book or system so they’re easy to find and use.
Making Laws Easier to Use
When laws are codified, it’s like giving them labels and sections, just like how you might sort your books by subject in a library. You don’t have to search through the whole room, you know where everything is. That makes life easier for judges, lawyers, and even everyday people who need to understand what the rules say.
Once everything is in order, it's much simpler to follow or change the rules later on, just like how you can easily add a new toy to your closet without making a mess again!
Examples
- A group of lawmakers passes a new rule about traffic lights, and it becomes part of the official traffic law book.
- When a city wants to add a new rule about parking, it's written into the main lawbook for that city.
- The government updates the lawbook every few years by adding new laws and removing old ones.
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