this post was submitted on 17 Dec 2025
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No Stupid Questions

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No such thing. Ask away!

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For example, is there a 'laws dot gov' kinda URL I can go to and type "importing raccoons to Northern Ireland to create a self-sustaining population" into the search bar?

Or maybe something like a multi-volume book series I can check at the library to see if "raccoon husbandry; N. Ireland" is mentioned?

Maybe an AI chatbot on the local council's website that I can ask "is it legal to raise baby raccoons by feeding them from miniature wheelie bins to teach them where food comes from and how to open the lids"?

I'm not about to do anything [potentially] illegal, I'm just curious.

Cheers! ๐Ÿฆ

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[โ€“] Rentlar@lemmy.ca 3 points 2 days ago

So generally the national laws are well documented as to what's a crime and what's not. Often there's a website.

Civil vs. Common law jurisdiction matters a fair bit. (As a gross simplification), in a civil law country that text is supposed to be the be-all end-all, judges are supposed to interpret cases based on whether the text of the law was followed or not and use their own discretion on whether past decisions should influence an active case. In common law jurisdictions, precedence from past cases matter a lot, and those decisions are cited by lawyers to say why it should be the same judgment or reasons why this case is different than previous to judge differently.

Then you have sub-national (state, province, prefecture) laws. Those will be well defined but their free availability from an official source online may vary.

Local by-laws will also depend on the location, they have less money so it may not be readily available digitally.

Some governments delegate rulemaking in specific areas, industries or fields to an internal ministry/department, to a professional body (engineers, doctors, lawyers etc.), or an organization (HOA, non profits). They are usually authorized by the law to set, modify, and enforce rules in that specialized area, with a maximum penalty they are permitted to give out for infractions.

So there's no book of all rules everywhere that can be searched that apply to a specific area.