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Titel:The (Economic) Effects of Lay Participation in Courts - A Cross-Country Analysis
Autor:Voigt, Stefan
Veröffentlicht:2008
URI:https://archiv.ub.uni-marburg.de/es/2024/0217
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17192/es2024.0217
ISSN: 1867-3678
DDC:330 Wirtschaft
Publikationsdatum:2024-01-08
Lizenz:https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0

Dokument

Schlagwörter:
Constitutional Economics, Economic Effects of Legal Systems, Lay Assessors, Quality, Civil Society, Judicial Decision-Making, Trial by Jury, Jurors

Summary:
Legal philosophers like Montesquieu, Hegel and Tocqueville have argued that lay participation in judicial decision-making would have benefits reaching far beyond the realm of the legal system narrowly understood. From an economic point of view, lay participation in judicial decisionmaking can be interpreted as a renunciation of an additional division of labor, which is expected to cause foregone benefits in terms of the costs as well as the quality of judicial decision-making. In order to be justified, these foregone benefits need to be overcompensated by other – actually realized – benefits of at least the same magnitude. This paper discusses pros and cons of lay participation, presents a new database and tests some of the theoretically derived hypotheses empirically. The effects of lay participation on the judicial system, a number of governance variables but also on economic performance indicators are rather modest. A proxy representing historic experiences with any kind of lay participation is the single most robust variable.


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