This special issue focuses on the role concept, which has largely fallen out of use in sociology, but which seems ideally suited to analyze the circumstances in which legal professionals work nowadays. Their occupations are often surrounded by constitutional guarantees and professional standards, but at the same time in full swing due to policy reforms referred to as New Public Management and Socially Effective Judiciary (Maatschappelijk Effectieve Rechtspraak). This combination of relative role stability and rapid change can ensure that the predictability and desirability of the interpretation attributed to professional roles become subject of discussion and reflection. The way the role concept is used in this special issue is deliberately decoupled from the much-criticized structural functionalism with which it is often associated. The fact that this sociological perspective has lost much of its sway since the 1960s, because of its conservative character, makes it easier to give dynamics, ambiguity, conflict and resistance a prominent place in contemporary analyzes in which the role concept is central. The authors in this special issue examine whether the role fulfillment by professionals working in the legal field is actually subject of discussion and reflection and how this dynamic manifests itself. |
Recht der Werkelijkheid
Meer op het gebied van Algemeen
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Redactioneel |
Roldynamiek binnen juridische professies |
Trefwoorden | Role theory, Legal professions, Occupational role, Role dynamism, Structural functionalism |
Auteurs | Peter Mascini en Nienke Doornbos |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Artikel |
Tussen partijautonomie en ongelijkheidscompensatie: hoe kantonrechters omgaan met niet-vertegenwoordigde partijen |
Trefwoorden | Self-representation, Party autonomy, Equality of arms, Judging, Civil procedure |
Auteurs | Jos Hoevenaars |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article focuses on the impact of the (increasing) possibility for parties in Dutch civil cases to litigate without the guidance of a legal aid provider on Dutch civil procedure. It analyses the extent to which such self-representation influences the role of the judge in the context of Dutch subdistrict court procedures, where representation is not mandatory. Through empirical data, collected through semi-structured interviews with 26 subdistrict judges, more insight is gained into the dilemmas that the lack of representation of parties presents to judges, and the ways in which they deal with these dilemmas. The interviews show how judges seek a balance between their role as neutral arbitrator in a dispute and a more active role necessitated by parties not being represented by a legal aid provider. In doing so, they navigate between process and content. Within this dynamic, judges must constantly balance the trade-off between acting more actively to gather sufficient information for a substantive handling and assessment of the case, on the one hand, and safeguarding the limits of party autonomy and their own (perceived) neutrality, on the other. Full party autonomy is viewed by judges as unrealistic and, moreover, contrary to truth-finding. |
Artikel |
Pragmatische vreemdelingenrechtersOver rolverschuiving van vreemdelingenrechters als gevolg van de coronamaatregelen |
Trefwoorden | Judiciary, COVID-19, Online hearing, Fair trial |
Auteurs | Karen Geertsema, Yasemin Glasgow, Ashley Terlouw e.a. |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this contribution we investigated: |
Artikel |
Gemeentelijke juridische professionals in verandering |
Trefwoorden | Legal professionals, Professional posture, professional role, Willingness to change |
Auteurs | Arnt Mein |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Legal professionals working in city and municipal government face changes in expectations about their roles within the organisation. Where in the past they mostly took on the reactive and detached role of guardians of legal quality, these days they are expected to take a more flexible, solution-oriented and cooperative stance. How do these legal professionals handle this shift? How far do they go in adapting and which factors play a role? Based on three different positions within the organisation I describe this process, focusing in particular on their perception of their professional roles, and their willingness to change. I conclude with some critical comments on the changing expectations from legal professionals. |
Artikel |
Mandaat voor de zittingEen onderzoek naar de rol van gemachtigden bij de bestuursrechter in eerste aanleg |
Trefwoorden | bestuursrecht, zitting, gemachtigde, verweerder |
Auteurs | Klaske de Jong |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article deals with the different expectations that government representatives face in court, where they need on the one hand be responsive to the demands of the judge and on the other hand are expected to defend the decision that was taken by the government body. |
Artikel |
Als wetgeving niet zwart of wit is, maar grijsStrategieën van professionals en burgers om met ambiguïteit in de Wmo 2015 om te gaan |
Trefwoorden | Tailor-made social support, Discretionary space, Role-ambiguity, Coping strategies, Multi-actor network |
Auteurs | Eline Marie Linthorst en Lieke Oldenhof |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
In this article we study a case of responsive law, i.e. the Dutch Social Support Act, which entails the open norm to provide tailored support as the antithesis of universal ‘one-size-fits-all-solutions’. Rather than assessing clients’ needs based on check lists, street-level bureaucrats are expected to jointly explore fitting solutions in dialogue with citizens during a so-called kitchen table talk. The space to tailor support to the individual situation, however, creates ambiguity about the interpretation of this open norm and conflicting expectations with regard to stakeholders’ roles. This role-ambiguity is not only situated in the interaction between professional and citizen at the kitchen table, but is nested in a multi-actor network of policy makers, frontline workers, clients of social support, lawyers and judges. In this article we zoom in on this network to investigate how multiple stakeholders cope with ambiguity regarding the interpretation of the open norm and each other’s roles. The conducted qualitative study (observations, interviews and document analysis) provides revealing insights into the strategies employed by multiple actors when role-ambiguity emerges, including strategies of standardization, proto professionalization and objectification. These strategies cannot be seen in isolation from one another and their interaction results in the unintended effect of more rules and administrative burden and less discretionary space for tailored support. Based on these findings we argue that mutual trust and insights into the various roles within this network is of great importance in order to prevent rule-reflex. In addition, professionals should be better equipped to conduct open dialogues about what constitutes appropriate support with the client. Finally, sufficient financial leeway is needed for municipalities so that they are not forced to constantly seek the legal boundaries of what can be regarded as the minimum variant of social support. |
Forum |
Zittingen via (beeld)bellen in coronatijd: ook veel plussen |
Auteurs | Bregje Krijnen |
Auteursinformatie |
Forum |
Is er toekomst voor onlinezittingen in de rechtspraak? |
Auteurs | Marijke ter Voert en Yasemin Glasgow |
Auteursinformatie |