Recent EU legislation has mandated the extension of comprehensive coverage of consumer dispute resolution (CDR) throughout the EU. The extension of CDR has given rise to a range of questions about the theoretical and practical implications of these changes. The field of CDR is underexplored in academic literature and only a few studies provide an overview of this rapidly developing area. There is a need to base CDR schemes on empirical evidence to inform practice and to provide justice. Tyler’s procedural justice model of public compliance with the law might be beneficial in this inquiry. This exploratory study tests whether Tyler’s well-established normative model of social regulation holds true in the CDR context by applying it to the omb...
Consumer protection legislation at EU and Member States’ level has been significantly strengthened i...
The article builds on a pluralistic perspective on law and the understanding that legal research mus...
This article identifies the tension between the public and the private nature of arbitration and ana...
Recent EU legislation has mandated the extension of comprehensive coverage of Consumer Dispute Resol...
Recent EU legislation has mandated the extension of comprehensive coverage of consumer dispute resol...
This policy brief reports on the main conclusions from an international conference held at Wolfson C...
Attitudes towards legal authorities based on theories of procedural justice have been explored exten...
The Transformation of Consumer Dispute Resolution in the EU, Conference funded by the Nuffield Found...
This article uses the lens of procedural justice theory to explore peoples’ experiences of an altern...
This paper is a combination of the ‘Oxford study 2012’ (C. Hodges, I. Benöhr & N. Creutzfeldt-Banda,...
This article proposes a model for designing consumer dispute resolution (CDR) mechanisms (including ...
In many areas, mandatory substantive law protects consumers. At first glance, this seems to indicate...
This study aims to examine the phenomenon of outsourcing access to justice in the consumer goods and...
Traditional court proceedings do not always offer practical and cost-appropriate way of resolving co...
This article argues that an analytic framework based on participation is useful for analysing consum...
Consumer protection legislation at EU and Member States’ level has been significantly strengthened i...
The article builds on a pluralistic perspective on law and the understanding that legal research mus...
This article identifies the tension between the public and the private nature of arbitration and ana...
Recent EU legislation has mandated the extension of comprehensive coverage of Consumer Dispute Resol...
Recent EU legislation has mandated the extension of comprehensive coverage of consumer dispute resol...
This policy brief reports on the main conclusions from an international conference held at Wolfson C...
Attitudes towards legal authorities based on theories of procedural justice have been explored exten...
The Transformation of Consumer Dispute Resolution in the EU, Conference funded by the Nuffield Found...
This article uses the lens of procedural justice theory to explore peoples’ experiences of an altern...
This paper is a combination of the ‘Oxford study 2012’ (C. Hodges, I. Benöhr & N. Creutzfeldt-Banda,...
This article proposes a model for designing consumer dispute resolution (CDR) mechanisms (including ...
In many areas, mandatory substantive law protects consumers. At first glance, this seems to indicate...
This study aims to examine the phenomenon of outsourcing access to justice in the consumer goods and...
Traditional court proceedings do not always offer practical and cost-appropriate way of resolving co...
This article argues that an analytic framework based on participation is useful for analysing consum...
Consumer protection legislation at EU and Member States’ level has been significantly strengthened i...
The article builds on a pluralistic perspective on law and the understanding that legal research mus...
This article identifies the tension between the public and the private nature of arbitration and ana...