Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union

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Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union. / Machura, Stefan; Kutnjak Ivkovic, Sanja; Hans, Valerie P.
In: Laikos, Vol. 1, No. 2, 02.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

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APA

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Machura S, Kutnjak Ivkovic S, Hans VP. 2024. Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union. Laikos. 1(2).

MLA

Machura, Stefan, Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovic and Valerie P. Hans. "Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union". Laikos. 2024. 1(2).

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Machura S, Kutnjak Ivkovic S, Hans VP. Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union. Laikos. 2024 Jan 2;1(2).

Author

Machura, Stefan ; Kutnjak Ivkovic, Sanja ; Hans, Valerie P. / Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union. In: Laikos. 2024 ; Vol. 1, No. 2.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Recent Developments about Lay Judges in the European Union

AU - Machura, Stefan

AU - Kutnjak Ivkovic, Sanja

AU - Hans, Valerie P.

PY - 2024/1/2

Y1 - 2024/1/2

N2 - Lay participation adds to the quality of the administration of justice. Few people, though, have an idea about the extent to which EU member states draw on lay judges. This article for the first time provides an overview on lay participation in civil and criminal justice in EU countries. Of the EU member states, the majority has some form of lay participation in criminal courts, mostly mixed courts (18 countries), in which lay and professional judges deliberate on cases together. Also in civil courts, a majority employ lay decision-makers, where 16 states have mixed courts. Juries, single lay judges, or panels exclusively consisting of lay people have become rare. Only four EU countries – Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, and The Netherlands – have no lay participation in criminal and civil trials. In some countries, lay participation is widespread, including for example, Austria, Finland, France, Germany, and Sweden. The article also identifies factors influencing the extent of lay participation in the courts. In conclusion: Lay judges are part of European legal culture.

AB - Lay participation adds to the quality of the administration of justice. Few people, though, have an idea about the extent to which EU member states draw on lay judges. This article for the first time provides an overview on lay participation in civil and criminal justice in EU countries. Of the EU member states, the majority has some form of lay participation in criminal courts, mostly mixed courts (18 countries), in which lay and professional judges deliberate on cases together. Also in civil courts, a majority employ lay decision-makers, where 16 states have mixed courts. Juries, single lay judges, or panels exclusively consisting of lay people have become rare. Only four EU countries – Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, and The Netherlands – have no lay participation in criminal and civil trials. In some countries, lay participation is widespread, including for example, Austria, Finland, France, Germany, and Sweden. The article also identifies factors influencing the extent of lay participation in the courts. In conclusion: Lay judges are part of European legal culture.

KW - Lay participation

KW - European Union

KW - Juries

KW - Lay judges

KW - Mixed courts

KW - Civil courts

KW - Criminal courts

M3 - Article

VL - 1

JO - Laikos

JF - Laikos

SN - 2941-3869

IS - 2

ER -