Case Assignment English Courts: A study of case assignment and impartiality in six European jurisdictions
(2007) p.133-188- Abstract
- Our report is concerned with the laws as they regulate judges with regard to case allocation and considers this in relation to four fields of practice. The first is commercial law where we investigate allocation in the Commercial Court and the Court of Appeal. Next is criminal law where we investigate allocation in a magistrates’ court and the Crown Court. Thirdly we examine welfare law and the Social Security Appeal Tribunal and finally family law, where we consider the High Court Family Division and the Inner London Family Proceedings Court.2 Before commencing our report on these four fields, we explain the general jurisdictional and administrative context within which the judges operate, and look at the general principles which shape... (More)
- Our report is concerned with the laws as they regulate judges with regard to case allocation and considers this in relation to four fields of practice. The first is commercial law where we investigate allocation in the Commercial Court and the Court of Appeal. Next is criminal law where we investigate allocation in a magistrates’ court and the Crown Court. Thirdly we examine welfare law and the Social Security Appeal Tribunal and finally family law, where we consider the High Court Family Division and the Inner London Family Proceedings Court.2 Before commencing our report on these four fields, we explain the general jurisdictional and administrative context within which the judges operate, and look at the general principles which shape the relationship between judicial integrity and case management and allocation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4537157
- author
- Flood, John ; Whyte, Avis ; Banakar, Reza LU and Webb, Julian
- publishing date
- 2007
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- family law, criminal law, civil law, courts, English law, commercial law
- host publication
- The Right Judge for Each Case
- editor
- Langbroek, Philip M. and Fabri, Marco
- pages
- 133 - 188
- publisher
- Intersentia
- ISBN
- 978-90-5095-650-5
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- f4ea89ec-e635-4a5d-b25b-23ef3315b760 (old id 4537157)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:45:28
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:07:00
@inbook{f4ea89ec-e635-4a5d-b25b-23ef3315b760, abstract = {{Our report is concerned with the laws as they regulate judges with regard to case allocation and considers this in relation to four fields of practice. The first is commercial law where we investigate allocation in the Commercial Court and the Court of Appeal. Next is criminal law where we investigate allocation in a magistrates’ court and the Crown Court. Thirdly we examine welfare law and the Social Security Appeal Tribunal and finally family law, where we consider the High Court Family Division and the Inner London Family Proceedings Court.2 Before commencing our report on these four fields, we explain the general jurisdictional and administrative context within which the judges operate, and look at the general principles which shape the relationship between judicial integrity and case management and allocation.}}, author = {{Flood, John and Whyte, Avis and Banakar, Reza and Webb, Julian}}, booktitle = {{The Right Judge for Each Case}}, editor = {{Langbroek, Philip M. and Fabri, Marco}}, isbn = {{978-90-5095-650-5}}, keywords = {{family law; criminal law; civil law; courts; English law; commercial law}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{133--188}}, publisher = {{Intersentia}}, title = {{Case Assignment English Courts: A study of case assignment and impartiality in six European jurisdictions}}, year = {{2007}}, }