The monograph is the culmination of the collaborative efforts of dedicated researchers within the Effective Justice International and Comparative Approaches Platform.
The book discusses two topics: organisation of judicial system; digital justice.
The book is the culmination of the collaborative efforts of dedicated researchers within the Effective Justice International and Comparative Approaches Platform.
It captures works on organisation of judicial systems and digital justice. The chapters address a range of topics, including national and international themes, particularly those relevant to links with the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Union law.
The common theme throughout the collection is the concept of effectiveness. It is seen in a multi-layered dimension related to the achievement of the goals inherent to a given procedure, institution, or process activity.
Editorial
PART I: ORGANISATION OF JUDICIAL SYSTEMS
I. Perceptions of the Effectiveness and Its Interdisciplinary Approach
Keynotes, Barbara Janusz-Pohl
II. Effectiveness through approximation in the EU Area of Freedom Security
and Justice, Benedetta Arrighini
III. The Impact of The Rule of Law Backslide on Revision of the Competences
of The Court of Justice of the European Union on the Matter of Member States
Domestic Jurisprudence, Jacek Szkudlarek
IV. Organizational Efficiency in the Spanish Judicial Power: New Trends, Ana
Beltrán Montoliu
V. Access to Justice and Proximity Justice in Spain: The Valencian model,
Andrea Planchadell-Gargallo
VI. Model of pre-trial proceedings and its influence on the judicial stage of
criminal proceedings comparative analysis of European legal systems, Justin
Glebocka
VII. Applying the achievements of 20th and 21st-century psychology to the
organisation of justice. Remarks on the improvement of judicial activity,
Konrad Burdziak
VIII. Challenging Legal Education in Pursuit of Judicial Efficiency: A
Comparative Analysis of Poland and Italy,Marcin Rau
PART II: DIGITAL JUSTICE
I. The European Union's strategy on digitalisation of judicial cooperation in
criminal matters: towards a more effective Justice in cross-border
scenarios?, Alejandro Hernández López
II. The Italian Route towards Digitalization of Criminal Proceedings. The
Latest Developments in the Field of Remote Justice, Marianna Biral
III. The impact of AI-based Recidivism Risk Assessment Instruments on human
decision-making in criminal justice: COMPAS case study in the context of
Polish and European Union law, Ewa Aleksandra P³ocha
IV. Systematic literature review of associations between question type and
adult witnesses accuracy: A step in creating a digital solution to train law
enforcement personnels investigative interviewing skills, Kristjan Kask et
al.
Daniele Vicoli is an Associate Professor of Criminal Procedure at the University of Bologna.
He is the author of a monograph on the time limits for criminal investigations. He has presented at many conferences and published papers in law journals. From 2017 to 2018, he was a member of the Committee for the Reform of the Penal Enforcement System.