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Judicial Dis-Appointments - Judicial Appointments Reform and the Rise of European Judicial Independence (Hardcover)
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Judicial Dis-Appointments - Judicial Appointments Reform and the Rise of European Judicial Independence (Hardcover)
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In 2009 and 2010, the European Court of Justice and the European
Court of Human Rights underwent significant reforms to their
respective judicial appointments processes. Though very different
judicial institutions, they adopted very similar - and rather
remarkable - reforms: each would now make use of an expert panel of
judicial notables to vet the candidates proposed to sit in
Luxembourg or Strasbourg. Once established, these two vetting
panels then followed with actions no less extraordinary: they each
immediately took to rejecting a sizable percentage of the judicial
candidates proposed by the Member State governments. What had
happened? Why would the Member States of the European Union and of
the Council of Europe, which had established judicial appointments
processes that all but ensured themselves the unfettered power to
designate their preferred judges to the European courts, and who
had zealously maintained and exercised that power over the course
of some fifty years, suddenly decide to undermine their own
capacity to continue to do so? This book sets out to solve this
mystery. Its point of departure is that it would be a mistake to
view the 2009-2010 establishment of the two vetting panels in
isolation from other European judicial developments. Though these
acts of institutional creation are certainly the most notable
recent developments, they actually represent but the crowning
achievement of a process of European judicial appointments reform
that has been running unremittingly since the 1990's. This
longstanding and tenacious movement has actually triggered a broad
set of interrelated debates and reforms, encompassing not only
judicial appointments per se, but also a much wider set of issues,
including judicial independence, judicial quality, judicial
councils, the separation of powers, judicial gender equity, and
more.
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