The quality of procedures is believed to play an important role in access to justice. It is assumed, that the quality of a procedure is high if people evaluate it as fair. Fair procedures are likely to improve access to justice. For the purpose of the present paper, the quality of procedures is determined in terms of people's perceptions of procedural justice. Pocedural justice refers to various aspects that a procedure should meet in order to be perceived as fair by its users. Research on procedural justice has a long tradition within the field of social psychology. It was therefore decided to focus on the theoretical and empirical framework of social psychology in order to define and evaluate the quality of procedures. Other frameworks, s...
According to the law, a fair police investigation provides due process by ensuring civilians are not...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Blader and Tyler (2003), following the 'Organisational Justice' school of thought, attempted to furt...
The quality of procedures is believed to play an important role in access to justice. It is assumed,...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
Fair procedures have long been a topic of great interest for human rights lawyers. Yet, few authors ...
This dissertation studies and challenges the importance of the social psychological concept of perce...
Procedural Justice offers a theory of procedural fairness for civil dispute resolution. The Article ...
This dissertation examines the role of perceived procedural justice in cases of perceived religious ...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
This study aims to put perceived procedural justice to a critical test in the context of Dutch crimi...
In this review Dr Amy Kirby and Professor Jessica Jacobson from the Institute for Crime and Justice ...
The social psychological theory of procedural justice emphasizes the fundamental importance of proce...
This contribution posits that on-going discussions on the value of fair procedure in legal theory wo...
The perception of being treated fairly during decision-making processes is an important topic in the...
According to the law, a fair police investigation provides due process by ensuring civilians are not...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Blader and Tyler (2003), following the 'Organisational Justice' school of thought, attempted to furt...
The quality of procedures is believed to play an important role in access to justice. It is assumed,...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
Fair procedures have long been a topic of great interest for human rights lawyers. Yet, few authors ...
This dissertation studies and challenges the importance of the social psychological concept of perce...
Procedural Justice offers a theory of procedural fairness for civil dispute resolution. The Article ...
This dissertation examines the role of perceived procedural justice in cases of perceived religious ...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
This study aims to put perceived procedural justice to a critical test in the context of Dutch crimi...
In this review Dr Amy Kirby and Professor Jessica Jacobson from the Institute for Crime and Justice ...
The social psychological theory of procedural justice emphasizes the fundamental importance of proce...
This contribution posits that on-going discussions on the value of fair procedure in legal theory wo...
The perception of being treated fairly during decision-making processes is an important topic in the...
According to the law, a fair police investigation provides due process by ensuring civilians are not...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people’s reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Blader and Tyler (2003), following the 'Organisational Justice' school of thought, attempted to furt...