Judging judges

<p>The principle of independence of the judiciary, while fundamental to a society based on the rule of law, is sometimes used to preclude the evaluation of courts. Such an approach is mistaken: judges and courts should be both independent and subject to evaluation.</p> <p>How to ev...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Galligan, D
Other Authors: The Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Foundation for Law, Justice and Society 2007
Subjects:
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author Galligan, D
author2 The Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
author_facet The Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Galligan, D
author_sort Galligan, D
collection OXFORD
description <p>The principle of independence of the judiciary, while fundamental to a society based on the rule of law, is sometimes used to preclude the evaluation of courts. Such an approach is mistaken: judges and courts should be both independent and subject to evaluation.</p> <p>How to evaluate judges and courts raises particular issues, such as how to maintain judicial independence and at the same time develop mechanisms of accountability. Few European countries, old democracies as well as new ones, have yet addressed these issues.</p> <p>Evaluation must take a twofold approach to address the distinct exercises of assessing judges individually and the judicial system as a whole. It is necessary with respect to each to devise separate standards of evaluation against which they can be meaningfully assessed. In evaluating judges individually, three types of standards are relevant: qualifications and training, judicial competence, and good conduct.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:bcb9402a-1cfc-4340-89ba-a9a2ca1200e92022-03-27T05:26:27ZJudging judgesReporthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_93fcuuid:bcb9402a-1cfc-4340-89ba-a9a2ca1200e9Socio-legal studiesEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetFoundation for Law, Justice and Society2007Galligan, DThe Centre for Socio-Legal StudiesThe Centre for Liberal Strategies<p>The principle of independence of the judiciary, while fundamental to a society based on the rule of law, is sometimes used to preclude the evaluation of courts. Such an approach is mistaken: judges and courts should be both independent and subject to evaluation.</p> <p>How to evaluate judges and courts raises particular issues, such as how to maintain judicial independence and at the same time develop mechanisms of accountability. Few European countries, old democracies as well as new ones, have yet addressed these issues.</p> <p>Evaluation must take a twofold approach to address the distinct exercises of assessing judges individually and the judicial system as a whole. It is necessary with respect to each to devise separate standards of evaluation against which they can be meaningfully assessed. In evaluating judges individually, three types of standards are relevant: qualifications and training, judicial competence, and good conduct.</p>
spellingShingle Socio-legal studies
Galligan, D
Judging judges
title Judging judges
title_full Judging judges
title_fullStr Judging judges
title_full_unstemmed Judging judges
title_short Judging judges
title_sort judging judges
topic Socio-legal studies
work_keys_str_mv AT galligand judgingjudges