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Borderlines in Private Law

Edited by: William Day, Julius Grower
Price: £90.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


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Law Making as an Institutional Game: Who Wins and Who Loses from Judicial Reforms?


ISBN13: 9781472471895
To be Published: January 2026
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £105.00



Judicial institutions are directly involved in law making and law enforcement. Their core business tightly refers to the venture, the fate, and the prospect of the law. And yet, despite numerous investigations of how far and deep courts intervene in policy making as well as how far and deep they reshape the law, very little has been revealed about the impact law making processes have on courts and more generally on the judicial system.

This book seeks to fill this gap by examining the law making process that unfolds in the context of judicial reforms. A 'reform' is meant here as an intentional change brought about in the institutional, organisational, cultural, procedural, managerial, setting where courts operate. Therefore, the book deals with 'change' of the judiciary. This change is not considered as the outcome of the reform - rather the change is considered, and accordingly conceptualised, as a process. As such, the book tells the story of the redistribution of power, resources, legitimacy, and capacity triggered by the process of the reform experienced by the judicial actors, both individual and institutional.

Theoretically, the book takes an institutionalist approach and draws on research over a 10 year period and an extensive empirical field comprising 8 EU member states. The analysis is informed by a large dataset drawn from the author's sole research along with those of two international research groups.

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Introduction: "Game" as a metaphor for judicial politics
Chapter 1. Squaring the circle between transnational and domestic variables
Chapter 2. Empowered actors leading the game: a third round of Eastern European judicial reforms
Chapter 3. Who writes judicial reforms? Vetoing without saying in Western democracies
Chapter 4. Institutional policies in comparative perspective
Chapter 5. Managerial and professional reforms.
Shipping politics in a safe harbour
Conclusion: Are judicial reforms win-win games?