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Reference Instruments Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks
Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks

How legal systems
behave when tested.

Beyond statutes, beyond precedent — the patterns of behaviour that define how a legal system actually responds under pressure.

5
Behaviour patterns
80
Jurisdictions mapped
4
GLRI dimensions
What they are

The patterns underneath the rules.

Legal systems have rules. They also have behaviours — patterns in how those rules are applied, how enforcement authorities exercise discretion, how courts respond to unfamiliar situations, and how institutions behave under political or economic pressure. These behaviours are often more determinative of outcomes than the rules themselves.

Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks are IJC's method for mapping these patterns — not as anecdotes or impressions, but as structured observations drawn from on-ground practice experience across jurisdictions and over time. They are the analytical layer that sits beneath the four GLRI dimensions and gives them their explanatory depth.

Statutory Behaviour vs Operational Behaviour
The framework that underlies enforcement scoring
Every jurisdiction has statutory rules governing how its courts and regulators must behave. Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks map the gap between those rules and what actually happens — the operational behaviour of the system as experienced by practitioners navigating it. This gap is almost always larger than legal databases suggest and smaller than pessimistic accounts imply. Mapping it precisely is what makes enforcement intelligence useful rather than merely interesting.
Observable indicators
Statutory timeline vs observed timeline for first-instance commercial judgment
Proportion of foreign arbitral awards challenged vs proportion successfully challenged
Government entity enforcement outcomes vs private party enforcement outcomes
Reform Trajectory vs Current State
The framework that underlies regulatory scoring
A static snapshot of a regulatory environment misses the most consequential variable — direction. A jurisdiction with moderate regulatory quality that is reforming rapidly in a predictable direction is a different environment from a jurisdiction with moderate regulatory quality that is deteriorating unpredictably. Frameworks capture trajectory as well as current state, making the regulatory score a forward-looking indicator rather than a backward-looking description.
Observable indicators
Volume and direction of regulatory change over a 24-month period
Proportion of regulatory decisions that are consistent with prior decisions
Enforcement surges — periods of disproportionate enforcement activity against a sector
Jurisdictional Interaction Patterns
The framework that underlies friction scoring
How two legal systems interact when they meet — in a cross-border transaction, a dispute involving parties from multiple jurisdictions, or a regulatory matter with extraterritorial reach — is determined as much by practice and institutional relationship as by formal treaty or statutory provision. Frameworks map these interaction patterns: which court systems cooperate reliably, which regulators maintain functional MLA relationships, where procedural incompatibility creates predictable friction points.
Observable indicators
Average time to serve process across specific jurisdiction pairs
Proportion of foreign judgments recognised in first attempt vs requiring re-litigation
Frequency of parallel proceedings creating outcome interference
Dispute Resolution Effectiveness Chain
The framework that underlies dispute scoring
The dispute resolution chain runs from initiation through judgment, enforcement, and asset recovery. Frameworks map the full chain — not just the quality of the arbitral institution or the competence of the commercial court, but the entire pathway from "we have a dispute" to "we have recovered our loss." Many jurisdictions perform well on the first link of this chain and break down on later links. The framework makes these breakpoints visible before proceedings are initiated.
Observable indicators
Proportion of arbitral awards where recovery equals or approaches the awarded amount
Frequency and outcome of anti-suit injunction applications
Asset tracing success rate in cross-border enforcement matters
Five behavioural patterns

How legal systems behave under pressure.

Across 80 jurisdictions, IJC has identified five recurring behavioural patterns — not descriptions of individual jurisdictions, but patterns that appear across multiple systems and create predictable outcomes for practitioners operating within them. Understanding which pattern dominates in a given jurisdiction is as important as knowing the technical rules.

The Reliable System
High enforcement confidence
Legal systems where statutory rules and operational behaviour are closely aligned. Courts operate within expected timelines. Regulatory decisions are consistent and predictable. Foreign judgments and arbitral awards are enforced efficiently. Outcomes are determined by the legal merits rather than by political context, institutional capacity, or enforcement asymmetry. These jurisdictions score consistently high across all four GLRI dimensions.
Examples in the GLRI: Singapore, Germany, United Kingdom, Switzerland
The Transforming System
High reform velocity
Legal systems undergoing active, significant reform — where the current state does not reflect where the system will be in 24–36 months, and where the direction of reform is generally positive but creates transitional uncertainty. The GLRI's trajectory scoring is most important for these jurisdictions. Practitioners who rely on historical assessments of these systems may find their assumptions have already been overtaken by events.
Examples in the GLRI: Saudi Arabia (Vision 2030), Uzbekistan, UAE (onshore reform)
The High-Volume System
Structural capacity pressure
Legal systems where the formal framework is generally sound but where volume pressure — on courts, regulatory bodies, and enforcement infrastructure — creates systematic delays, inconsistency, and forum variability. These jurisdictions often have high-quality commercial courts operating alongside significantly more congested ordinary civil courts. Outcome predictability depends heavily on the specific court and the specific judge, not just the legal system as a whole.
Examples in the GLRI: India, Brazil, Philippines
The Dual-Track System
Parallel legal frameworks
Legal systems where two distinct legal frameworks operate in parallel — common law and civil law in the same territory, offshore and onshore jurisdictions with different enforcement regimes, federal and state systems with unresolved jurisdictional conflicts. The GLRI tracks both tracks and the interaction between them. Understanding which track governs your specific matter is the first and most consequential question for any practitioner entering these jurisdictions.
Examples in the GLRI: UAE (DIFC/onshore), Hong Kong (HKSAR/mainland), Cyprus (EU/offshore)
The Asymmetric System
Structural enforcement asymmetry
Legal systems where outcomes depend systematically on the identity of the parties rather than the merits of the matter — where enforcement against government-linked entities produces different outcomes from enforcement against private parties, where foreign parties encounter different treatment from domestic parties, or where connected parties navigate the system differently from unconnected ones. The asymmetry is not always corruption — it may be structural, cultural, or institutional — but its effect on outcome predictability is the same.
Examples in the GLRI: Nigeria, certain MENA jurisdictions, some Eastern European markets
Relationship to the GLRI

The analytical layer beneath the Index.

Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks are not a separate product from the Global Legal Readiness Index™. They are the analytical infrastructure that gives the Index its depth — the structured methodology that translates observed intelligence from Constituent Designated Law Practices and Assembly Fellows into the four scored dimensions of the GLRI.

Enforcement Behaviour
The Statutory vs Operational behaviour framework is the primary analytical lens for this dimension — mapping the distance between the formal enforcement guarantee and the observed enforcement reality across court systems, regulatory bodies, and arbitral institutions.
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Regulatory Volatility
The Reform Trajectory framework is the primary analytical lens for this dimension — capturing not just the current regulatory posture but the direction and pace of change, making the GLRI score a forward-looking indicator rather than a static description.
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Cross-Border Friction
The Jurisdictional Interaction Patterns framework maps the practical barriers to cross-border legal effectiveness — procedural incompatibilities, language requirements, institutional non-cooperation, and dual system complexity that create friction regardless of the quality of each individual legal system.
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Dispute Reality
The Dispute Resolution Effectiveness Chain framework maps the full pathway from dispute initiation through recovery — making visible the breakpoints where jurisdictions perform well on formal dispute resolution but fail on the translation of outcome into actual recovery.
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Global Legal Readiness Index™
The GLRI combines all four dimensions into a comprehensive jurisdictional assessment — drawing on Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks as its analytical foundation and on the on-ground intelligence of Constituent Designated Law Practices as its primary data source.
Explore the GLRI →
Executive Orientation Desk
Jurisdictional Behaviour Frameworks inform the intelligence applied in every EOD session — giving the counsel conducting the orientation a structured way to contextualise their on-ground experience for your specific situation.
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