The identification of courts as “open” and “public” institutions is commonplace in national and transnational conventions. But even as those attributes are taken for granted, the privatization of adjudication is underway. This paper explores how - during the last few centuries - public procedures came to be one of the attributes defining certain decision-making institutions as “courts.” The political and theoretical predicates for such practices can be found in the work of Jeremy Bentham, a major proponent of what he termed “publicity,” a practice he commended for various entities from the Panopticon for prisoners to the Parliament and courts for legislators and judges. Bentham argued the utility of publicity in enhancing accuracy, public e...
[Abstract: Gathering together an impressive array of legal scholars from around the world, this book...
In a previous paper, I compared Bentham and Austin's positivisms. I showed that the difference betwe...
As regards political commitment, Halévy’s seminal study (1995) has made Bentham known as a member of...
Jeremy Bentham’s constitutional writings are innovative and radical. Unlike constitutional arrangeme...
This paper entertains the general assumption of the traditional role of the court as the chief adjud...
The place of utility as a critical theory of human existence has been largely discredited and its po...
Debate exists about how much alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ) is used in courts and about the ...
In this essay—considering privacy and secrecy in courts—I first offer a brief history of the pub...
Jeremy Bentham once said: « Publication is the soul of law ». Court decisions cannot and must not on...
According to a well-established interpretive line, the Benthamic judge would be allowed no room for ...
Although known as the founder of modern utilitarianism and the source of analytical jurisprudence, B...
This essay – and the thirty images included – reflect themes in Representing Justice: Invention, Con...
This article aims to evaluate the contribution of Bentham’s ideas to the jurisprudential debate in v...
In this article, the possible tension between adjudication, understood as a public service, on the o...
[Abstract: Gathering together an impressive array of legal scholars from around the world, this book...
[Abstract: Gathering together an impressive array of legal scholars from around the world, this book...
In a previous paper, I compared Bentham and Austin's positivisms. I showed that the difference betwe...
As regards political commitment, Halévy’s seminal study (1995) has made Bentham known as a member of...
Jeremy Bentham’s constitutional writings are innovative and radical. Unlike constitutional arrangeme...
This paper entertains the general assumption of the traditional role of the court as the chief adjud...
The place of utility as a critical theory of human existence has been largely discredited and its po...
Debate exists about how much alternative dispute resolution ( ADR ) is used in courts and about the ...
In this essay—considering privacy and secrecy in courts—I first offer a brief history of the pub...
Jeremy Bentham once said: « Publication is the soul of law ». Court decisions cannot and must not on...
According to a well-established interpretive line, the Benthamic judge would be allowed no room for ...
Although known as the founder of modern utilitarianism and the source of analytical jurisprudence, B...
This essay – and the thirty images included – reflect themes in Representing Justice: Invention, Con...
This article aims to evaluate the contribution of Bentham’s ideas to the jurisprudential debate in v...
In this article, the possible tension between adjudication, understood as a public service, on the o...
[Abstract: Gathering together an impressive array of legal scholars from around the world, this book...
[Abstract: Gathering together an impressive array of legal scholars from around the world, this book...
In a previous paper, I compared Bentham and Austin's positivisms. I showed that the difference betwe...
As regards political commitment, Halévy’s seminal study (1995) has made Bentham known as a member of...