Judiciaries must build support in societies

Frans van Dijk, Kees Sterk

Research output: Non-textual formWeb publication/siteAcademic

Abstract

The concerted attacks on judicial independence in a range of European countries, especially in Poland and Hungary, draw widespread condemnation internationally but also feelings of frustration: Why does the European Commission not act decisively to block this ‘backsliding’? High expectations turned into disillusionment (Steinbeis 2020). This is of course a vital issue, but the sole reliance on supranational intervention painfully shows the lack of resilience of national judiciaries, despite the courage of individual judges and some judges associations. Why is it relatively easy for governments to push judiciaries over? They have a fundamental weakness: their lack of connection with society. Judiciaries have a strong tendency to solely rely on legal protections, instead of also on public support. They put little systematic effort in building such support.
Original languageEnglish
PublisherVerfassungsblog
Media of outputOnline
Size1800 words
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • judicial independence
  • Poland
  • trust
  • judge

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