On Judicial and Quasi-Judicial Independence9789462360945 | 1 edition, 2013 |
Description | |
Preface |
Table of Contents
Description
Principles of judicial and quasi-judicial independence are fundamental to all democracies and yet, the notion of independence is still elusive. What is judicial and quasi-judicial independence and why is it important? From whom and what are the judiciary and other adjudicators to be independent? Is the expansion of the judiciary’s power a threat to judicial independence? Are courts inevitably political institutions? Are there sociological pre-conditions needed to secure judicial independence in modern legal systems where the court’s ‘law making’ role is increasingly important? Equally relevant is the question as to what extent principles of judicial independence apply to quasi-judicial bodies such as tribunals, regulatory and policy-making agencies, advisory committees, enforcement bodies and other administrative decision-makers. In other words, to what extent should these bodies be independent from the branches of government that have created them or from the industry they are charged to regulate and, if so, how should the appropriate degree of independence be determined? It is the purpose of this book, as of the Groningen international conference that preceded it, to bring eminent judges and scholars to revisit the concepts of judicial and quasi-judicial independence, to discuss the threats and challenges that perhaps call for different safeguards or solutions and to thereby reflect on the distinctive nature of courts as well as administrative decision-makers and our commitment to adjudicative independence.
Target group
Scholars interested in Law and Governance.
Author's information
Suzanne Comtois is Visiting Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Groningen, the Netherlands, and Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada. She is an Associate member of the International Academy of Comparative Law and member of the Quebec Bar Association.
Kars de Graaf is Associate Professor of administrative and environmental law at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. He is a member of the board of the Dutch Association of Environmental
Law, managing editor of the Review of European Administrative Law (REALaw) and honorary judge in the district court in the North of the Netherlands.
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