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Better Access to Justice by Public Recognition of Non-State Justice Systems?

Cover: Justice without the State

Cover: Justice without the State

Matthias Kötter – 2016

Access to justice is the term used to denote the institutional and social conditions for the realization of rights. In recent international security and development policy, the term is used in various ways as a guiding principle for "good law" and "good justice," and, for actors in these sectors, it has assumed central importance in their concepts and programs. Newer approaches particularly emphasize support for informal, non-state justice systems and their integration into the superordinate legal system, mainly in state law. Yet, does the official recognition of non-state legal systems guarantee access to justice, and under what conditions is this the case? Starting from this question the paper first retraces the formulation of the concept of access to justice in constitutional legal thinking principally at the end of the 1970s, and second discusses whether non-state justice systems can provide access to justice in an equivalent manner and which conceptual and normative drawbacks arise.

Title
Better Access to Justice by Public Recognition of Non-State Justice Systems?
Publisher
Vittorio Klostermann
Location
Frankfurt/Main
Keywords
Research Project B7
Date
2016-05-01
Identifier
ISBN 978-3465042686
Appeared in
Peter Collin (ed.): Justice without the State within the State, Frankfurt/Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 283-310. Bereits erschienen in: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History Research Paper Series No. 2, 2015.
Language
eng
Type
Text