Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There are increasing calls for the adoption of more “therapeutic” and “problem solving” practices by mainstream judges in civil and criminal courts in a number of jurisdictions, most notably in the United States and Australia. Currently, a judge who sets out to exercise a significant therapeutic function is quite likely to be doing so in a specialist court or jurisdiction, outside the mainstream court system, and, arguably, from outside the adversarial paradigm itself. To some extent, his work is tolerated but marginalized. But do therapeutic and problem solving functions have the potential to define, rather than complement, the role of judicial off...
This study aimed to analyse a shifting paradigm of Dominus Litis (judge activeness) in the Indonesia...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
The growth, development and institutionalisation of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) processes i...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Modern courts have evolved around two central legal traditions—the adversarial and the inquisitorial...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
A “mature” science, according to Thomas Kuhn, can afford to be uncritical. It has finally answered t...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
Occasionally, in pursuing their adjudicative duties over the course of a legal hearing, judges are c...
One aspect of a possible new era is the increasing ad hoc activity of various interest groups, inclu...
Despite the abundance of studies exposing heuristic and biased thinking in judicial decision-making,...
The presentation was exceptionally well received with one of the originators of Therapeutic Jurispru...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This study aimed to analyse a shifting paradigm of Dominus Litis (judge activeness) in the Indonesia...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
The growth, development and institutionalisation of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) processes i...
Problem solving courts appear to achieve outcomes which are not common in mainstream courts. There a...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Problem-solving courts appear to achieve outcomes that are not common in mainstream courts. There ar...
Modern courts have evolved around two central legal traditions—the adversarial and the inquisitorial...
If therapeutic jurisprudence is so good, its applicability should not be limited to the trial courts...
A “mature” science, according to Thomas Kuhn, can afford to be uncritical. It has finally answered t...
This article offers a number of suggestions concerning how judges should act in problem solving cour...
Occasionally, in pursuing their adjudicative duties over the course of a legal hearing, judges are c...
One aspect of a possible new era is the increasing ad hoc activity of various interest groups, inclu...
Despite the abundance of studies exposing heuristic and biased thinking in judicial decision-making,...
The presentation was exceptionally well received with one of the originators of Therapeutic Jurispru...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
This study aimed to analyse a shifting paradigm of Dominus Litis (judge activeness) in the Indonesia...
The structure and practices of justice systems in many parts of the world are undergoing what can be...
The growth, development and institutionalisation of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) processes i...