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Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift voor Ontslagrecht, Aflevering 1 2021 |
Trefwoorden | Ontslagrecht, Rechtsvergelijking, Dismissal law |
Samenvatting |
Artikel |
Upperdogs Versus UnderdogsJudicial Review of Administrative Drug-Related Closures in the Netherlands |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 1 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Eviction, War on drugs, Party capability, Empirical legal research, Drug policy |
Auteurs | Mr. Michelle Bruijn en Dr. Michel Vols |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In the Netherlands, mayors are entitled to close public and non-public premises if drug-related activities are being conducted there. Using data from the case law of Dutch lower courts, published between 2008 and 2016, this article examines the relative success of different types of litigants, and the influence of case characteristics on drug-related closure cases. We build on Galanter’s framework of ‘repeat players’ and ‘one-shotters’, to argue that a mayor is the stronger party and is therefore more likely to win in court. We categorise mayors as ‘upperdogs’, and the opposing litigants as ‘underdogs’. Moreover, we distinguish stronger mayors from weaker ones, based on the population size of their municipality. Similarly, we distinguish the stronger underdogs from the weaker ones. Businesses and organisations are classified as stronger parties, relative to individuals, who are classified as weaker parties. In line with our hypothesis, we find that mayors win in the vast majority of cases. However, contrary to our presumptions, we find that mayors have a significantly lower chance of winning a case if they litigate against weak underdogs. When controlling for particular case characteristics, such as the type of drugs and invoked defences, our findings offer evidence that case characteristics are consequential for the resolution of drug-related closure cases in the Netherlands. |
Artikel |
Wel of geen identiteitscontrole? Het dilemma van de ‘rule enforcer’ |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2018 |
Trefwoorden | Identity control, Police, Rule enforcer, Selectivity, Discretionary space |
Auteurs | Dra Inès Saudelli |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
It is common knowledge that the police in executing its duty as “rule enforcer” disposes of certain discretionary powers. Because of the heavy workload and the often ambiguous legislation, the police officer needs to decide on a selective basis when, how and towards whom he/she will act. These discretionary powers are present in proactive identity controls and already provoked strong reactions in the past. The media accused the police of over-controlling certain minority groups. With this ethnographic study into the Belgian practice of identity controls, in which we observe and interview police officers, we wish to get a better view of the way in which identity controls are executed. Although the research is still ongoing, we have already been able to establish that the decision-making process is based on a police feeling which police officers claim to have and which is formed by (a combination of) different triggers attracting their attention. |
Artikel |
Moral entrepreneurs in de 21ste eeuw |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2018 |
Trefwoorden | Moral entrepreneurs, Becker, Discourse, Crusading reformer, Symbolic interactionism |
Auteurs | Dr. Olga Petintseva en Prof. Tom Decorte |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In the introductory article of this special issue on ‘moral entrepreneurs’ in the 21st century, we situate different notions of moral entrepreneurship. Particularly foregrounding Howard Becker’s definition, we discuss its origins and use in subsequent research. The question that we’ve put forward in the ‘call for papers’ for this special issue is to what extent the notion is relevant in contemporary research and who is considered as ‘moral entrepreneur’. The research papers discuss ‘entrepreneurial’ practices of university ethic commissions, medical professionals, police officers and the leaders of cannabis social clubs. We conclude that the underlying rationales and discourses of moral entrepreneurs that the authors identify, reflect contemporary neoliberal ideals. |
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Artsen en moreel ondernemerschap. De casus van de normalisering van verslavende opioïde pijnstillers in de Verenigde Staten |
Tijdschrift | Tijdschrift over Cultuur & Criminaliteit, Aflevering 3 2018 |
Trefwoorden | Opioid crisis, Addictive painkillers, Medical doctors, Moral entrepreneurs, Big Pharma |
Auteurs | Dr. Thaddeus Müller |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this article, I am using Becker’s concept of moral entrepreneur to analyse the role of pain specialists in the labelling process, which has led to the normalisation of the use of opioid painkillers in the United States and ultimately to the death over 200.000 Americans. In general, the literature on labelling centres on crusading reformers, and the criminalisation and stigmatisation of transgressive behaviour. Here I will focus on the moral entrepreneurship of medical experts. What was their role in the normalisation process of opioid painkiller use and are there any similarities with the strategies of crusading reformers? My findings, based on qualitative analysis of documents such as newspaper articles and academic publications, show that, with two exceptions, pain specialists use the strategies of moral crusaders. First, in their narratives, pain specialists represented themselves as neutral objective experts without the emotional stance of moral crusaders. The second exception, which is related to the first, is that there was less emphasis in their narrative on creating villains, as they could not blame openly standard medical practice because they needed the support of the established medical world in order to normalise and legalise opioid painkillers. |
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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. |
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Tijdschrift | Markt & Mededinging, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | gun-jumping, artikel 4 en 7 Concentratieverordening, meldingsplicht, standstillverplichting, artikel 34 Mw |
Auteurs | Stijn de Jong |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In dit artikel beschrijft de auteur het fenomeen ‘gun-jumping’ (het zonder goedkeuring van de mededingingsautoriteit implementeren van meldingsplichtige concentraties) aan de hand van recente Nederlandse en Europese zaken. |
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A Distorted Mediation Landscape: Judicial Mediation in the Chinese Civil Courts |
Tijdschrift | Nederlands-Vlaams tijdschrift voor mediation en conflictmanagement, Aflevering 3 2016 |
Trefwoorden | Chinese civil justice, Mediating civil and commercial disputes in China, Comparative civil procedure, Judicial behaviour in Chinese civil courts |
Auteurs | Peter Chan |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Mediation plays a critical role in the development of any civil justice system. The positive effects of mediation could only manifest if the process is protected in ways that allow parties to truly be able to choose what is best in their interests and explore options free from interference from anyone else. The Chinese legal culture, coupled with a systemic distortion of the function of mediation during the period between March 2008 and March 2013, made it very difficult to develop an authentic mediation system that places party autonomy and other core principles at the heart of the process. As much as the leaders of the Supreme People’s Court today are aware of the need to strengthen the courts role in declaring legal norms and enforcing rights, it is argued that courts (especially lower courts) are likely to continue to use judicial mediation for institutional or strategic purposes. |
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National variations in the implementation and enforcement of European food hygiene regulationsComparing the structure of food controls and regulations between Scotland and the Netherlands |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2014 |
Trefwoorden | food regulation, official controls, EU food law, implementation, enforcement |
Auteurs | Tetty Havinga |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Over the course of time the European Union has increased its powers considerably. Currently, almost all food safety regulations in the member states rest on European law. Despite this common legal base, several differences between member states still exist. This article compares the way Scottish and Dutch authorities deal with a particular item of European food law: the development of national guides to good practice for hygiene and for the application of HACCP principles by the food industry. The results of this investigation are consistent with the conclusion of Falkner et al. that the implementation of EU law in both the Netherlands and the UK depends on domestic issues. The dominant issue in Scotland (and the UK) is the FSA objective to bring consistent food controls and independency from industry which results in the development of governmental guidance. The prevailing issue in the Netherlands is making industry responsible for food safety which helps explain the extensive use of industry guides. This study shows that in order to understand what happens on the ground it is important to look beyond transposition or direct effect and also to investigate the implementation of regulations and to dig deeper than just their transposition. |
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What role is there for the state in contemporary governance?Insights from the Dutch building sector |
Tijdschrift | Recht der Werkelijkheid, Aflevering 3 2014 |
Trefwoorden | governance, collaborative governance, governance performance, urban sustainability, fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) |
Auteurs | Jeroen van der Heijden |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
An emerging body of empirical governance studies highlights that the role of the state in governance has been changing. It has moved away from governing societal problems solely through traditional direct regulatory interventions. State actors are now (also) taking up facilitative and enabling roles in innovative voluntary governance arrangements. This article seeks to gain a better understanding of these facilitating and enabling roles of state actors in real world practice and what (clusters of) roles are needed to obtain successful outcomes from these arrangements. It builds on an empirical study of ten different arrangements in the Dutch sustainable building sector, which are analysed using fuzzy set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA) methodology. It finds no evidence that any of the specific (clusters of) role(s) is necessary to achieve positive outcomes from the arrangements studied, but uncovers that when combined, such roles affect the outcomes of arrangements. It concludes by presenting an evidence-based typology of combinations of roles that state actors may wish to take up in seeking positive outcomes from innovative voluntary governance arrangements, or preventing negative outcomes. |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 4 2012 |
Auteurs | Marios Koutsias en Chris Willett |
Auteursinformatie |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 4 2012 |
Auteurs | C.M.D.S. Pavillon |
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Tijdschrift | Erasmus Law Review, Aflevering 1 2009 |
Auteurs | Rachid Abdullah Khan en Gareth Davies |
Auteursinformatie |