COLLECTIVE EXECUTION AND DEJUDICIALIZATION: BETWEEN EFFECTIVENESS AND FUNDAMENTAL GUARANTEES

Authors

  • Leandro Galicia de Oliveira UNAERP
  • Carlos Eduardo Montes Netto UNAERP

Abstract

Brazilian civil enforcement has faced a historical deficit in effectiveness, reflected in the gap between the declaration of a right and its fulfillment. The 2015 Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) responded with the general executive clause (art. 139, IV), expanding the repertoire of atypical measures, while Bill 6.204/2019 proposes the dejudicialization of enforcement actions through an enforcement agent at the protest notary's office. This article investigates to what extent—and under what conditions—dejudicialization can increase efficiency without violating the defendant's fundamental rights. Methodologically, exploratory research is conducted using a literature review and qualitative data analysis. The analysis points to the suitability of a hybrid model that prioritizes patrimonial and informational means, reserves atypical measures for strictly necessary situations, with qualified motivation and a defined timeframe, and structures dejudicialization with transparent proceduralization, sufficient judicial oversight, governance, and technological interoperability. It is concluded that the combination of judicial control and standardized extrajudicial routines is capable of increasing predictability and speed of execution without sacrificing legal certainty.

Published

2025-12-26

How to Cite

Galicia de Oliveira, L., & Carlos Eduardo Montes Netto. (2025). COLLECTIVE EXECUTION AND DEJUDICIALIZATION: BETWEEN EFFECTIVENESS AND FUNDAMENTAL GUARANTEES. Anais Do Congresso Brasileiro De Processo Coletivo E Cidadania, 13(13), 843–854. Retrieved from https://revistas.unaerp.br/cbpcc/article/view/3931

Issue

Section

Acesso à Justiça, Proteção de Direitos e Coletivização das Demandas