Open·Parlamento › Italian law
italian law · real sources
Italian law, explained and queryable
Open·Parlamento turns Italian law into something you can read, navigate and cite: the Constitution, the codes, consolidated statutes and EU law — each with a stable identifier (ELI/CELEX) and the real amendment relations behind it.
What you’ll find
- The Constitution — the fundamental law of the Italian Republic (1948): structure and key articles (page in Italian: Costituzione).
- The codes — penal, civil, procedure, road, consumer, insurance (in Italian: codici).
- Consolidated statutes — decrees and laws with per-article text and amendment relations: indexed corpus.
- EU law & case law — regulations, directives and CJEU rulings via EUR-Lex (CELEX).
Query it
Ask a question in the app and get an answer with the real source cited — or, for developers, plug the open-source MCP servers into Claude Desktop or Cursor.
Open data
The legal corpus, amendment relations and the knowledge graph are public and citable — see open data. Italian site: open-parlament.xyz.
Informational tool — not legal advice. Sources are public and citable (ELI/CELEX).