Court Administration and Quality Work in Judiciaries in Four European Countries: Empirical Exploration and Constitutional Implications

P.M. Langbroek, Mirjam Westenberg

Research output: Book/ReportBookAcademic

Abstract

Court administration performs a delicate balancing act between the legal demands of court proceedings and the organisational needs of efficiency and quality management: it involves a basic tension between judicial independence and accountability towards the public and towards the political domain.
Research in four European countries - Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Switzerland - shows how quality management can be practised in court administration while safeguarding judicial values. Results are discussed per country in terms of the professional judicial perspective, the managerial perspective, and the political perspective. Recommendations are formulated on the basis of a comparative analysis across the countries.
This book invites judges and scholars in public administration or political science to take an interest in court management. It may help managers and policymakers in the field of justice to make strategic choices that keep our democracies resilient within constitutional boundaries.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationBern
PublisherStaempfli Verlag
Number of pages372
Volume9
Edition2018
ISBN (Electronic)978-3-7272-7683-5
ISBN (Print)978-3-7272-7678-1
Publication statusPublished - 9 Apr 2018

Publication series

NameSchriftenreihe zur Justizforschung
PublisherStaempfli Verlag
No.9

Keywords

  • Court Administration
  • Judicial Independence
  • Quality management
  • Accountability
  • Professional autonomy
  • constitutional law

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