Taking justice seriously

the problem of courts overload and the new model of judicial process

Auteurs

  • Alessandro Martinuzzi University of Bologna

Mots-clés :

Civil procedure, ADR, judicial overload, Reform, Precedent, Case-management, Unreasonable delay of justice

Résumé

This article traces a profound world-wide metamorphosis of the judicial process. It analyses recent procedural legislations adopted in the United Kingdom, the Unites States of America, France, Germany, Spain and Italy fashioned to address the problems of unreasonable delay and access to justice. The main tendencies that emerge from the analysis outline the passage from an authoritarian model of adjudication to a more cooperative approach based on flexibility of the time schedule and availability of alternative choices. Moreover, an instrument generally adopted to reduce the demand for justice is the selection of meritorious cases on the base of the conformity to precedents. It is, indeed, a procedural law development that may change the perspective on the civil law-common law divide.

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Biographie de l'auteur

Alessandro Martinuzzi, University of Bologna

Post-doctoral fellow in comparative law at the University of Bologna, Italy. Ph.D. and Former Visiting Fellow at the Cardozo Law School of New York, U.S.A.

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Publiée

2017-04-14

Comment citer

MARTINUZZI, Alessandro. Taking justice seriously: the problem of courts overload and the new model of judicial process. Civil Procedure Review, [S. l.], v. 8, n. 1, p. 65–106, 2017. Disponível em: https://civilprocedurereview.com/revista/article/view/139. Acesso em: 21 nov. 2024.

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