(What We Talk About When We Talk About) Judicial Temperament

T. Maroney
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Judicial temperament is simultaneously the thing we think all judges must have and the thing that no one can quite put a finger on. Extant accounts are scattered and thin, and either present a laundry list of desirable judicial qualities without articulating what (if anything) unifies the list or treat temperament as a fundamentally mysterious quality that a judge either does or does not have. Resting so much—selection, evaluation, discipline, even removal—on such an indeterminate concept is intellectually and practically intolerable. Polarized debates over Justice Kavanaugh’s fitness to sit on the Supreme Court made clear just how badly we need a common vocabulary to guide our discourse on judicial temperament. This Article—the first extended scholarly treatment of the topic—posits that, because judicial temperament is a psychological construct, we ought to draw upon psychology to understand it. It therefore taps a deep well of scientific research to construct a new psycho-legal theory of judicial temperament. It conceives judicial temperament as a deep-seated, relatively stable set of specific personal traits—separable from intellect, training, and ideology—that, in dialectic with specific judicial environments and the predictable demands of judging, drive behaviors that affect how justice is delivered and perceived. The critical trait dimensions of a judge’s temperament are positive emotionality, negative emotionality, kindness, and self-regulation. The combination of these traits determines how well or poorly her temperament will fit with any given judicial assignment. Although judicial temperament is somewhat malleable, potential for change is constrained. This scientifically grounded theory shows why some seldom-mentioned attributes—like courage—are temperamental, and other commonly-cited ones—such as commitments to equality and diversity—are not. This Article provides a principled alternative to the folk-wisdom manner in which judicial temperament traditionally has been defined and assessed. Setting the theoretical terms for empirical testing of its claims—and with the potential to transform processes for judicial selection, evaluation, and support—the psycho-legal theory posited here shows what we should be talking about when we talk about judicial temperament.
司法气质
司法气质是我们认为所有法官都必须具备的东西,也是没有人能完全指出的东西。现有的描述分散而单薄,要么列出了一份令人向往的司法品质清单,而没有阐明是什么(如果有的话)统一了这份清单,要么将气质视为法官所具备或不具备的一种根本神秘的品质。在这样一个不确定的概念上停留太多——选择、评估、纪律,甚至清除——在智力和实践上都是不可容忍的。关于卡瓦诺大法官是否适合担任最高法院法官的两极分化的辩论清楚地表明,我们多么需要一个共同的词汇来指导我们关于司法气质的讨论。这篇文章是对这一主题的首次扩展学术论述,它认为,由于司法气质是一种心理建构,我们应该借鉴心理学来理解它,从而挖掘科学研究的深井,构建一种新的司法气质心理法律理论。它将司法气质视为一组根深蒂固的、相对稳定的特定个人特征,与智力、训练和意识形态分离,与特定的司法环境和可预测的审判需求辩证,驱动影响正义交付和感知方式的行为。法官气质的关键特质维度是积极情绪、消极情绪、善良和自我调节。这些特征的结合决定了她的气质在多大程度上适合任何特定的司法任务。尽管司法气质有一定的可塑性,但变革的潜力是有限的。这一有科学依据的理论表明,为什么一些很少被提及的特质——比如勇气——是有气质的,而其他经常被引用的特质——例如对平等和多样性的承诺——则不是。本条提供了一种原则性的替代方式,以取代传统上定义和评估司法气质的民间智慧方式。为其主张的实证检验设定了理论术语,并有可能改变司法选择、评估和支持的过程,这里提出的心理法律理论表明了我们在谈论司法气质时应该谈论什么。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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