We intend to examine ways that emotions may be intertwined within argumentative legal discourses. From the transcript of a brief trial in a Court of Appeal in Brazil we have the opportunity to observe how the emotional and rational reasoning live together in a deliberation among magistrates. “The leg broken case” allow us to examine how judges define the value of compensation to be paid in cases of moral damage. We show that not only technical arguments are the compounds of one decision; subjectivity is also important in that legal context. We would yet confirm what jurists and philosophers of the argumentation fields, such as G. Cornu (2005), E. Feteris (1999), A. Garapon (2001, 2008), J. J. Robrieux (2010), C. Perelman (1999), C. M. Stama...
At the basis of tireless efforts to explain the nature of law lies the question of how judges sho...
This article deals with the duty to justify judicial decisions and the role of argumentation increas...
In this conceptual article, we propose that legal professional decision makers’ transformation of na...
Drawing on ethnographic data collected in Italian courts and prosecution offices, this dissertation ...
Arguing from the premise that personal injury plaintiffs and injury evidence do not taint proceedi...
Based on the theory of the emotions proposed by Martha Nussbaum, the present paper proposes a theory...
The independence of the judiciary is challenged in several ways. One is the populist narrative of th...
This essay argues that the simulation of emotion, which also results in multiple shifts of moral per...
Why require Justice to be blind to passions? The standard model of jurisprudence offers two lines of...
In this paper I aim to analyse the features and elements of legal argumentation in so called tragic ...
According to traditional legal thought, emotions should have no influence on legal decision-making. ...
The philosophy of emotion raises complications for theories of precedent. This chapter argues that i...
The topic ‘Law and Emotion’ has prompted a collection of papers previously presented in the Special ...
Legal scholars often analyze argumentation from a formal perspective, mostly applied to judicial dec...
The aim of this study was to analyze the arguments rated by judges to form an understanding of the m...
At the basis of tireless efforts to explain the nature of law lies the question of how judges sho...
This article deals with the duty to justify judicial decisions and the role of argumentation increas...
In this conceptual article, we propose that legal professional decision makers’ transformation of na...
Drawing on ethnographic data collected in Italian courts and prosecution offices, this dissertation ...
Arguing from the premise that personal injury plaintiffs and injury evidence do not taint proceedi...
Based on the theory of the emotions proposed by Martha Nussbaum, the present paper proposes a theory...
The independence of the judiciary is challenged in several ways. One is the populist narrative of th...
This essay argues that the simulation of emotion, which also results in multiple shifts of moral per...
Why require Justice to be blind to passions? The standard model of jurisprudence offers two lines of...
In this paper I aim to analyse the features and elements of legal argumentation in so called tragic ...
According to traditional legal thought, emotions should have no influence on legal decision-making. ...
The philosophy of emotion raises complications for theories of precedent. This chapter argues that i...
The topic ‘Law and Emotion’ has prompted a collection of papers previously presented in the Special ...
Legal scholars often analyze argumentation from a formal perspective, mostly applied to judicial dec...
The aim of this study was to analyze the arguments rated by judges to form an understanding of the m...
At the basis of tireless efforts to explain the nature of law lies the question of how judges sho...
This article deals with the duty to justify judicial decisions and the role of argumentation increas...
In this conceptual article, we propose that legal professional decision makers’ transformation of na...