There are four aspect of law namely:
1. Public and private law: Public laws are those laws that are relevant to matters affecting the entire community for examples laws about criminal activity or the environment. Public law involves interrelationship between the state and the general population. While private law involves interactions between private citizens or it applies to the relationship between an individual and the government.
2. Criminal and civil law: Criminal is a body of rules and statues that defines conduct prohibited by the government because it threatens and harms public safety and welfare and that establishes punishment to be imposed for the commission of such acts. While civil law is a body of rules that delineate private rights and remedies, and govern disputes between individuals in such areas as contracts, property, and family law; distinct from criminal or public law.
3. Municipal and international law: municipal law is the national level, but law at the states, provincial, territorial, regional or local levels. White as far as the law of the state is concerned, these may be distinct categories of law, and international law is largely uninterested in this distinction and treats them all as one. While international law is the set of rules generally regarded and accepted as binding in relations between states and nations. It serves as a framework for the practice of stable and organized international relationship.
4. Substantive law and procedural: substantive law is the statutory or written law that defines rights and duties, such as crimes and punishments (in the criminal law), civil rights and responsibilities in civil law. It is codified in legislated statues or can be enacted through the initiative process. While procedural law or adjective law comprises the rules by which a court hears and determines what happens in civil law suit, criminal or administrative proceedings. The rules are designed to ensure a