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Christianna Stylianidou 31 • 12 • 2025

The titles of laws adopted in 2025 and the concerns raised around good law‑making

Christianna Stylianidou
The titles of laws adopted in 2025 and the concerns raised around good law‑making
31 • 12 • 2025

In the titles of 38 laws adopted in 2025, phrases similar to “and other provisions” appeared. This raises concerns and doubts as to whether the rules and principles of good law‑making are being substantively followed.

To safeguard the purpose of good law‑making, provisions of the Constitution (including Article 74), the Rules of Procedure of Parliament (including Articles 85, 87, 88 and 101) and Law 4622/2019 (Articles 57–64) regulate issues related to the legislative drafting and law‑making process and set out rules that must be followed when drafting, submitting and adopting a bill or amendment.

Findings for 2025

In 2025, 97 legislative acts were adopted (Laws 5168/2025 to 5264/2025). Of these:

  • 34 were “International Conventions” (ratifications of treaties, agreements, memoranda of understanding, decisions, etc.)
  • 63 were “Laws”

A closer examination of 47 of these laws showed that 38 laws included in their titles phrases such as:

  • “and other provisions/regulations”
  • “and other urgent provisions”
  • “other regulations of the Ministry…”
  • “other provisions under the competence of the Ministry…”

with no further clarification of the subject matter regulated by those provisions.

Similar issues appear in earlier stages of the legislative process:

  • 28 bills contained such phrases in their titles when submitted to Parliament
  • 24 bills contained such phrases already at the public consultation stage

Even when the titles of laws do not include these phrases, it is not uncommon for a chapter or section within the law to bear the title “other provisions” without this being reflected in the general title. This occurred in six laws in 2025 (Laws 5215/2025, 5223/2025, 5243/2025, 5246/2025, 5253/2025 and 5261/2025) and in thirteen bills that contained a chapter titled “other provisions” without this being stated in the bill’s title.

The Scientific Service of Parliament has also highlighted this “mismatch” between title and content in several of its reports (see, among others, the following reports: 1 (p 16), 2 (p14), 3 (p 18))

The dataset on which these findings are based is available here.

Where is the problem with the rule of law?

Under the rule of law, the Government and Parliament must follow and apply the rules established to guarantee and promote practices of good and transparent law‑making.

In Greece, however, the failure to adhere to the principles and rules of good law‑making appears to be a long‑standing and systemic problem.

The particularly frequent (and historically recurring) inclusion of phrases such as “and other provisions” in the titles of laws inevitably raises serious concerns as to whether the rules of good law‑making are being substantively followed during the legislative drafting and law‑making process. This is because including such phrases in the title of a law – signalling, among other things, the possible presence of provisions unrelated to the main subject of the law or to each other – is a practice that runs counter to the principles of good law‑making.

Christianna Stylianidou
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