Courts as social engineers: A social genesis of judicial decisions? The perceived development of courts into arenas for societal change comes with many questions. One can question, for example, whether the courtroom forms the right place for bringing societal change about. Stijn van Deursen • June 17, 2022
The role of European Courts in contemporary (im)migration governance The migration domain is made of a congeries of institutional and non-institutional actors contending and negotiating their role and space in the migration governance. What is the role of courts in this complex, stratified and ever-changing context? Madalina Bianca Moraru • June 16, 2022
The delicacy of terroir: Mining, food culture, and the courts as a last resort Can fine wine, cheeses, and other culturally unique food products co-exist with mining and resource extraction? In a dispute, the courts are the wrong venue to achieve just and sustainable solutions. Ron Janjua • June 14, 2022
The Argentine Supreme Court: An environmental protection force to be reckoned with In contrast to the traditional role of judges as neutral arbiters of legal disputes, the Argentine judiciary has played an increasingly political role in recent years, taking a strong interventionist approach in environmental cases. Asmaa Khadim • June 10, 2022
The Tata saga: Another environmental issue on the court's plate? After local residents filed charges against Tata Steel, last February the Dutch Public Prosecution Service (PPS) started criminal investigations into the steel company. These events fit in a broader trend of citizens turning to the judiciary when they feel other institutions are failing them. Lisa Ansems • June 09, 2022 • 7 comments
Courts as an Arena for Societal Change Please join our conference, Courts as an Arena for Societal Change, on 8 and 9 July 2022, at Leiden Law School, Leiden University, in the Netherlands. Alex Geert Castermans • May 30, 2022