对ENCJ《司法独立与问责评估方法》研究意见的反应。

Q2 Social Sciences
F. Dijk, P. Langbroek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们感谢Stefan Voigt、Elaine Mak、David Kosař、Samuel Spac、Ingo Keilitz和Marco Fabri对本期特刊的贡献。他们对为ENCJ制定的司法独立性和问责制指标的评论为未来的发展提供了许多有用的想法。评论还反映了作者的不同学科背景,并指出有必要在参与司法独立性分析的不同学科中定位ENCJ方法。很明显,对ENCJ研究的评论者的方法大相径庭。在经济学中,该方法侧重于衡量包容性的独立性,将其作为经济增长或产权保护等计量经济模型中的变量。更多的(事实上的)独立性可以提高经济表现,但如何实现更多的独立性并没有得到解决。从组织绩效管理的角度来看,独立性是客户法庭绩效的一部分,并在一定程度上服从于它。通过法律、描述性的方法,详细描述了不同国家的情况,也是司法文化的一部分。ENCJ的研究只设定了衡量司法独立性的标准,而没有涉及法院和法官的总体绩效衡量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reaction on the comments on the ENCJ study on Method for Assessment of Judicial Independence and Accountability.
We are grateful for the contribution of Stefan Voigt, Elaine Mak, David Kosař, Samuel Spac, Ingo Keilitz and Marco Fabri to this Special Issue.  Their commentaries on the indicators for independence and accountability of the judiciary as developed for the ENCJ give many useful ideas for future development. The comments also reflect the different disciplinary backgrounds of the authors and point to the need to position the ENCJ approach within the diverse disciplines that engage in the analysis of judicial independence. It is obvious that the approaches of the commenters on the ENCJ study differ widely. In economics the approach focuses on measuring independence for inclusion as variable in econometric models about, for instance, economic growth or protection of property rights. More (de-facto) independence enhances economic performance, but how more independence is to be achieved is not addressed.  From the perspective of performance management of organizations, independence is part of court performance for the clients and to some degree subservient to it. In a legal, descriptive approach, the situation in different countries is described in detail, also as a part of judicial culture. The ENCJ study only sets criteria for measuring judicial independence, and does not address performance measurement of courts and judges in general.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: The International Journal for Court Administration (IJCA) is an on-line journal which focuses on contemporary court administration and management. It provides a platform for the professional exchange of knowledge, experience and research in those areas for a diverse audience of practitioners and academics. Its scope is international, and the editors welcome submissions from court officials, judges, justice ministry officials, academics and others whose professional, research projects, and interests lie in the practical aspects of the effective administration of justice. IJCA is an open access journal, and its articles are subjected to a double blind peer review procedure. Please contact the editors if you are not sure whether your research falls into these categories.
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