What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change

This article describes what has recently been published in Dutch research on the behaviour and actions of judges during civil oral hearings in Dutch courtrooms in relation to experienced procedural justice and with regard to reaching settlements. It tries to distil what we know and to provide an ins...

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Main Author: Rick J. Verschoof
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University School of Law 2014-11-01
Series:Utrecht Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.289/
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spelling doaj-2431cce77d3a4110b6aa5257f6265d692020-11-25T03:48:51ZengUtrecht University School of LawUtrecht Law Review1871-515X2014-11-01104415510.18352/ulr.289283What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for ChangeRick J. Verschoof0Utrecht University School of LawThis article describes what has recently been published in Dutch research on the behaviour and actions of judges during civil oral hearings in Dutch courtrooms in relation to experienced procedural justice and with regard to reaching settlements. It tries to distil what we know and to provide an insight into what we do not know as yet and it pays attention to a new way of handling cases during oral hearings: the search for the underlying conflict. What is this exactly? Do we know, or can we predict what this way of handling oral hearings will do in terms of perceived procedural justice and in terms of settling the case?The author concludes as a legal scientist that we do not know enough to be sure that this approach has a positive effect, although we do have clues pointing in that direction, and that more research is needed. He advocates, based on his professional experience as a judge, that it is better to move forward and to begin to really train the judiciary in communication techniques and in the management of conflict resolution, because there is much to be gained in these fields and the goal of the judiciary should be to remain connected with what the parties need and want from a modern judge.http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.289/underlying conflictprocedural justicereaching settlements
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rick J. Verschoof
spellingShingle Rick J. Verschoof
What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
Utrecht Law Review
underlying conflict
procedural justice
reaching settlements
author_facet Rick J. Verschoof
author_sort Rick J. Verschoof
title What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
title_short What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
title_full What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
title_fullStr What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
title_full_unstemmed What Is It All About? An Overview of the Dutch Research and a Plea for Change
title_sort what is it all about? an overview of the dutch research and a plea for change
publisher Utrecht University School of Law
series Utrecht Law Review
issn 1871-515X
publishDate 2014-11-01
description This article describes what has recently been published in Dutch research on the behaviour and actions of judges during civil oral hearings in Dutch courtrooms in relation to experienced procedural justice and with regard to reaching settlements. It tries to distil what we know and to provide an insight into what we do not know as yet and it pays attention to a new way of handling cases during oral hearings: the search for the underlying conflict. What is this exactly? Do we know, or can we predict what this way of handling oral hearings will do in terms of perceived procedural justice and in terms of settling the case?The author concludes as a legal scientist that we do not know enough to be sure that this approach has a positive effect, although we do have clues pointing in that direction, and that more research is needed. He advocates, based on his professional experience as a judge, that it is better to move forward and to begin to really train the judiciary in communication techniques and in the management of conflict resolution, because there is much to be gained in these fields and the goal of the judiciary should be to remain connected with what the parties need and want from a modern judge.
topic underlying conflict
procedural justice
reaching settlements
url http://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/10.18352/ulr.289/
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