This paper considers access to the rule of law as a requirement for the well-functioning of the rule of law in society. In most rule of law debates, access to the rule of law is not a topic of discussion because these scholars focus themselves solely on the legalistic dimension of the rule of law. Barber was the first to mention the social dimension explicitly but without a theoretical framework. Based on the three capitals of Bourdieu, this paper offers a framework to determine the elements of the social dimension. With these capitals, barriers to the access to the rule of law for individuals can be identified, and solutions can be offered. |
Zoekresultaat: 34 artikelen
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2021 |
Trefwoorden | rechtsstaat, toegang tot het recht, sociale dimensie, Nicholas Barber, Pierre Bourdieu |
Auteurs | Nathalie Franziska Hendrika Schnabl |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Inleiding |
De Omgevingswet: nieuw ruimtelijk recht(?) |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | Environment and Planning Act, Administrative Law reform, Spatial Planning, Prefigurative Law, Outsourced Law |
Auteurs | Dr. mr. Tobias Arnoldussen en dr. mr. Danielle Chevalier |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Environment and Planning Act (EPA), which will enter into force in 2021, has been called the most influential legislative reform in the Netherlands since World War II. This article forms the introduction to a special issue devoted to the EPA, in which scholars from various disciplines reflect on the societal and legal ramifications of this new act. The authors introduce the different articles but also offer their perspective on the emergence of this new field of research. Socio-legal research into such a vast new regulatory field benefits from the application of multiple perspectives and different research methods. Conspicuously, the authors of the various articles differ on how to assess the new regulation of Dutch spatial planning. Some are pessimistic, others strike a more optimistic note. In this introduction two more perspectives on the law are offered. The perspective of prefigurative law (Davina Cooper) embodies the more optimistic view, whilst the perspective of outsourced law (Pauline Westerman) sides with the pessimists. |
Artikel |
Conflict narratives and conflict handling strategies in intercultural contextsReflections from an action research project based on restorative praxis |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2019 |
Trefwoorden | action research, conflict, restorative justice, intercultural contexts |
Auteurs | Brunilda Pali |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
A rapidly growing field of research and practice, restorative justice has primarily found its gravitational centre within the criminal justice system, as an alternative of dealing with the aftermath of crime. Less explored remains the application of restorative justice in complex, urban, or intercultural contexts, an application which raises a whole set of conceptual and practical challenges. This article is based on an action project which aimed to research conflict narratives in intercultural contexts and transform them through restorative praxis. Mostly used in educational, organizational, and health care settings, action research remains an underused but a highly interesting methodology for criminology and criminal justice research. Its alternative epistemology makes it particularly apt for scientific projects that aim both at investigating crime and justice related issues and at engendering change, either at the level of criminal justice or communities. Although action research has focused mostly on creating change at the level of practical knowledge, when conceived in a critical manner, action research aims not only at improving the work of practitioners, but also at assisting them to arrive at a critique of their social or work settings. Practice concerns at the same time problem setting or problem framing. By zooming into one of the case studies of the project, more specifically the social housing estates in Vienna, I focus in this article specifically on the tensions and dilemmas created by processes of engagement in a problematizing approach to the context and to practice. During these processes, together with other social actors, such as inhabitants and professionals, we named problems (in our case social conflicts) and framed the context in which we addressed them. I argue that participatory forms of inquiry, such as action research, should actively reframe rather than merely describe contexts and problems they work with. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | storylines of law, qualitative research, law in action, law in books |
Auteurs | Danielle Antoinette Marguerite Chevalier |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The maxim ‘law in books and law in action’ relays an implicit dichotomy, and though the constitutive nature of law is nowadays commonly professed, the reflex remains to use law in books as an autonomous starting point. Law however, it is argued in this article, has a storyline that commences before its institutional formalisation. Law as ‘a continuous process of becoming’ encompasses both law in books and law in action, and law in action encompasses timelines both before and after the formal coming about of law. To fully understand law, it is necessary to understand the entire storyline of law. Qualitative studies in law and society are well equipped to offer valuable insights on the facets of law outside the books. The insights are not additional to doctrinal understanding, but part and parcel of it. To illustrate this, an ethnographic case study of local bylaws regulating an ethnically diverse public space of everyday life is expanded upon. The case study is used to demonstrate the insights qualitative data yields with regard to the dynamics in which law comes about, and how these dynamics continue for law in action after law has made the books. This particular case study moreover exemplifies how law is one of many truths in the context in which it operates, and how formalised law is reflective of the power constellations that have brought it forth. |
Artikel |
Risico’s rondom de eindovereenkomst bij mediation in strafzakenOver (de)juridisering, strijdige belangen en management van verwachtingen |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift voor Herstelrecht, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | vaststellingsovereenkomst, Eisen vaststellingsovereenkomst, Strijdige belangen, Eindresultaat, procesbegeleider |
Auteurs | Janny Dierx en Marlène Panis |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Penal mediation is currently gaining ground within the Dutch criminal law system. The practice of penal mediation is still young, however, and therefore vulnerable. Common criminal practice as well as legislation are not yet thoroughly compatible with practicing penal mediation. The authors of this contribution explore some of the dangers mediators in penal cases face while drafting party-agreements that are to be taken into consideration by the judicial authorities. |
Editorial |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 1 2018 |
Auteurs | Kristin Henrard Ph.D. en Jeremie Gilbert |
Auteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Mediation on trial: Dutch court judgments on mediation |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands-Vlaams tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement, Aflevering 4 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Case law, The Netherlands, Voluntariness, Confidentiality |
Auteurs | Annie de Roo en Rob Jagtenberg |
Auteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Voorbij procedurele rechtvaardigheidDe betrekkelijkheid van de beleving van respondenten |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Procedural Justice, Administrative law, Access to Justice, Outcomes of legal proceedings |
Auteurs | Dr. Nienke Doornbos |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
To overcome problems of juridification and formalization of administrative law, successful initiatives have been undertaken by professionals in the public administration and judiciary to improve administrative procedures. These initiatives have been inspired by theories of (perceived) procedural justice, as developed by Tyler and Lind (1988). Although the author acknowledges the importance of procedural justice, she argues that the strong focus on procedural aspects, based on subjective opinions of claimants, may unintentionally lead to a situation in which other important issues may be easily overlooked, such as the question why citizens would refrain from starting a lawsuit or the question what explains the low success rates of citizens in administrative law. |
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Law and Method, oktober 2017 |
Auteurs | Catalina Goanta |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
It is often claimed in the media and in political and academic debates that more law nurtures more research, which in turn should generate more information. However, the question researchers are left with is: What does this mean for comparative law and its methods? This paper takes the context of European consumer sales law as an example of the web of rules applicable at both European and national level. In this context, the main idea behind this article is that looking at law and research as data to be built upon and used in further analysis can revolutionise the way in which legal research is understood. This is because current research methods in European consumer sales law fall short of systematically analysing the essential weaknesses of the current regulation system. In this contribution, I argue that the volume of regulation in European consumer law is large enough for it to be considered Big Data and analysed in a way that can harness its potential in this respect. I exemplify this claim with a case-study consisting in the setting up of a Convergence Index that maps the converging effect of harmonizing policies adopted by the European legislator in the field of |
Artikel |
“The production of law”: Law in action in the everyday and the juridical consequences of juridification |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | juridification, production of space, law in action, local bye-laws |
Auteurs | dr. mr. Danielle Chevalier |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In an increasingly diversifying society, public space is the quintessential social realm1x Lofland 1998. where members of that diverse society meet each other. Thus space is shared, whilst norms regarding that space are not always shared. Of rivalling norms, some are codified into formal law, in a process Habermas called juridification. Early Habermas regarded juridification a negative process, ‘colonizing the lifeworld’. Later Habermas argued juridification a viable pillar for conviviality in diversity. The shift in Habermas’ perspective invites the question how law works in action. In this article a frame is offered to scrutinize the working of law in action in public space, by applying the conceptual triad of spatial thinker Lefebvre to understand how law is “produced”. It argues that how law is perceived in action is pivotal to understanding how law works in action. Moreover, it discusses the possible ramifications of the perception of law in action for how the legal system as a whole is perceived. Noten
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Artikel |
Framing labor contracts: Contract versus network theories |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | contract theory, Network theory, Labor regulation, subjectivity, performativity |
Auteurs | Robert Knegt |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Since the 18th century the ‘contractual model’ has become both a paradigm of social theories (f.i. ‘rational choice’) and a dominant model of structuring labour relations. Its presupposition of the subjectivity of individual actors as a given is criticized with reference to network-based theories (Latour, Callon) and to analyses of Foucault. The current contract model of labour relations is analyzed from a historical perspective on normative regimes of labour relations, that imply different conceptions of ‘subjectivity’. Research into the regulation of labour relations requires an analysis in terms of an entanglement of human beings, technologies and legal discourse. |
Redactioneel |
Social Theory and Legal Practices |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Auteurs | Tobias Arnoldussen, Dr. Robert Knegt en Associate Professor Rob Schwitters |
Auteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Autonomy of law in Indonesia |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Rule of law, Indonesia, Socio-legal studies, Legal scholarhip, Judiciary |
Auteurs | Professor Adriaan Bedner |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article seeks to answer how useful the theoretical approaches developed in Europe and the United States are for explaining or understanding the autonomy of law in Indonesia – a nation that is on the verge of becoming a lower-middle-income country and whose legal system presents many of the features found in other developing countries’ legal systems. The article first sketches three lines of theoretical thought that have dominated the inquiry into autonomy of law in (Western) sociology and then assesses to what extent they are represented in the socio-legal studies of Indonesian law. The conclusion is that although socio-legal scholars studying developing countries need supplementary concepts and theories, they can use the Western ones as their point of departure in understanding the functioning of law in a setting that is very different from the one in which these theories were developed. |
Boekbespreking |
Soft-drugs, morality and law in Late Modernity |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 2 2016 |
Trefwoorden | review-essay, proefschrift Chevallier, blow-verbod, symbolic crusade, culture of control |
Auteurs | Thaddeus Müller |
Auteursinformatie |
Artikel |
The legacy and current relevance of Cappelletti and the Florence project on access to justice |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2015 |
Trefwoorden | definition and dimensions access to justice, recommendations, historic context access to justice, current context access to justice |
Auteurs | Bernard Hubeau |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This contribution explains what access to justice can encompass and how the ideals about access to justice have developed in time. The way to do this is going back to the work of the famous scholars Cappelletti and Garth, who were responsible for a worldwide project on access to justice in the 1970s. Their main issue was to explain access to justice is more than the access to a judge and the organization of courts. Primarily, the system must be equally accessible to all, irrespective of social or economic status or other incapacity. But it also must lead to results that are individually and socially just and fair. Equal access and effective access are the central notions. Their work is put in perspective. The importance of their legacy and the question how we can get along with their work are stressed. Their definition is compared to a few other authoritative definitions. The waves in the history of access to justice are described and putting them in the current context illustrates why a fourth waved can be observed. The major question to be answered is how one can assess the challenges and obstacles of access to justice in the current context. Therefore, some recent dimensions and developments within access to justice are presented: the democratic dimension, the effectiveness of new social rights, the attention for poor and vulnerable people, further juridification, expanding frontiers of and monitoring access to justice, e-justice, and self-help. Finally, a few building blocks for reforms are presented. |
Artikel |
Responsibilities of the state and legal professions |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2015 |
Trefwoorden | responsibilities, the state, lawyers, the judiciary and judges |
Auteurs | Mies Westerveld en Ashley Terlouw |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This contribution, which is based on the Dutch legal system, deals with the responsibilities of the State and legal professions in ensuring access to justice. The responsibilities of the four main players involved in bringing justice to the citizen are discussed: the legislator, the executive, the judiciary, and the legal profession. Responsibilities for access to justice do not only stem from the law, they do also evolve from societal problems and discussions. The contribution deals with both. Several actors share some of the responsibilities. One can think of responsibilities for information, for financing, and for being aware of vulnerabilities and other obstacles. What are the legal responsibilities and what other responsibilities are felt by the actors involved and how do they deal with them? And as a result: do they contribute to access to justice, do they form an obstacle, or both? |
Discussie |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2015 |
Auteurs | Luigi Corrias |
Auteursinformatie |
Diversen |
Developments in socio-legal studies: subjects and methodologies – the Anglo-Saxon model |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 1 2015 |
Trefwoorden | socio-legal, neo-liberal, legal aid |
Auteurs | Hilary Sommerlad |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In the course of it short existence, Socio-legal studies (SLS) in the Anglo-Saxon world has burgeoned into a rich and variegated field. Reviewing it is therefore a challenging task. I begin with some general reflections and an outline of recent developments. Although these indicate an extremely vibrant field, concerns have been expressed for the future. In my discussion of these, I argue that our analysis of SLS needs to be historicised since the emergence of SLS is connected to processes of social modernization and democratization. The erosion of these processes by neo-liberal discourses and policies is the background to a discussion of my own research into the impact of the cuts to civil legal aid in England and Wales. This leads me to conclude that the fundamental dissonance between neo-liberal rationality and social science may portend a difficult future, in particular for empirical work; however, I note too that other developments such as the ongoing juridification of society and new social media may make continued SL engagement irresistible. |
Article |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2015 |
Auteurs | Annie de Roo |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The article takes as its point of departure some of the author’s multidisciplinary projects. Special attention is given to the question of whether the disciplines united in the various research team members already constituted a kind of ‘inter-discipline’, through which a single object was studied. The issue of how the disciplinary orientations of the research team members occasionally clashed, on methodological issues, is also addressed. |
Editorial |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 3 2014 |
Auteurs | Laura Carballo Piñeiro en Xandra Kramer |
Auteursinformatie |