European University Institute Library

Courts, social change and judicial independence, organized by Adriana Silvia Dreyzin de Klor, Luis Miguel Poiares Pessoa Maduro, Antoine Vauchez

Label
Courts, social change and judicial independence, organized by Adriana Silvia Dreyzin de Klor, Luis Miguel Poiares Pessoa Maduro, Antoine Vauchez
Language
eng
Abstract
The diversity and quality of the nine papers presented give an idea of both the broadness and richness of the seminar. Its great originality lies in the wide range of disciplinary and geographical views from which the topic has been considered, including doctrinal, historical, sociological, law-in-context or political science perspectives. The paper by Frédéric Mégret provides a critical assessment of civil society participation in supranational courts indicating a number of possible alternatives in judicial reform. He is followed by Daniel Kelemen's contribution that questions the extent to which American adversarial legalism' has been transplanted to the European countries. Loretta Ortiz Ahif then brings a more law-and-society approach to tackle the issue of (social and legal) conditions limiting access to justice in Latin America. Mikael Madsen then turns the attention to the broad historical and social processes in which delegation to courts takes place. Alec Stone Sweet points at the related 'fiduciary responsibilities' that weigh upon judges as a consequence of such delegation. Relatedly, Kim Scheppele presents reflections on the "fragility of courts" in contexts of strong populist challenges such as in Hungary. With Mattias Kumm's contribution, the discussion moves on to the issue of 'representativeness' suggesting a useful typology to think thereabout. In this framework, Mark Pollack addresses the question of judicial nomination and how dissent can be organized within international courts. Iyiola Solanke closes the discussion with reflections on possible ways to reconcile representativeness and impartiality in contemporary courts. All along the seminar, a large variety of views have been discussed and many suggestions or recommendations have been put forward. Rather than shaping an unlikely consensus, this joint Policy Paper aims to clarify both conceptually and empirically the wide range of issues at stake in the emerging and evolving role of judges and courts
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Courts, social change and judicial independence
Oclc number
851517327
Responsibility statement
organized by Adriana Silvia Dreyzin de Klor, Luis Miguel Poiares Pessoa Maduro, Antoine Vauchez
Series statement
EUI working papers. RSCAS PP, 2012/07EUI papersGlobal Governance Programme
Summary
This paper is based on a High-Level Policy Seminar (HLPS) on 16-17 March 2012, organised by the Global Governance Programme at the EUI, where current and former judges from international, regional and constitutional courts and leading academics in the field of judicial politics, legal theory and international law critically debated over the complex relations between "Courts, social change and judicial independence". current state of legal play
Table Of Contents
Introductory Remarks, Antoine Vauchez 1 --Private Actor Litigation and the Evolving Legitimacy of Supranational Adjudication, Frédéric Mégret 3 --The Rise - and the limits - of Eurolegalism, R. Daniel Kelemen 11 --Right of access to free justice and legal assistance, Loretta Ortiz Ahlf 17 --Explaining the Power of International Courts in their Contexts: From Legitimacy to Legitimization, Mikael Rask Madsen 23 --Courts, Social Change and Judicial Independence, Alec Stone Sweet 33 --Courts under Political Pressure: Minimum Criteria for Judicial Independence in Europe, Kim Lane Scheppele 37 --Representativeness and Independence of Courts, Mattias Kumm 53 --Research Frontiers in International Judicial Independence: Judicial Appointment and Dissent, Mark A. Pollack 57 --Embedding 'uncommon sense' in judicial independence, Iyiola Solanke 63
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