Essays about: "procedural justice"

Showing result 1 - 5 of 85 essays containing the words procedural justice.

  1. 1. "The Competition of Values in the European Arrest Warrant Tracing the Conflict and Prioritization Between Collective Security and Individual Justice Within Case Law of the CJEU"

    University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Juridiska institutionen

    Author : Nadja Nordlund; [2024-02-16]
    Keywords : European Arrest Warrant; Mutual Recognition; Effective Law Enforcement; International Cooperation; Procedural Justice; Rule of Law; Right to a Fair Trial; Proportionality;

    Abstract : The European Arrest Warrant system is built on balancing between individual justice, which safeguards the right to a fair trial of subjects to extradition, and collective security, which seeks to ensure public safety and effective law enforcement. This thesis provides for an analysis of this balance and its evolution, exploring how the prioritization of individual justice and collective security, as manifested in the EAW, have shifted through the evolutive interpretation of the Court of Justice of the European Union. READ MORE

  2. 2. Delivering Difficult Decisions - Exploring organizational justice in the Swedish Social Insurance Agency’s communication

    University essay from Göteborgs universitet/Förvaltningshögskolan

    Author : Astrid Kihl; [2023-06-14]
    Keywords : Negative decisions; Interactional justice; Procedural justice; Social insurance; Sickness benefit;

    Abstract : Aim: The aim of this thesis is to deepen our understanding of how public authorities enact justice when communicating negative decisions to citizens. Specifically, the study examines withdrawal letters sent by the Swedish Social Insurance Agency (SIA) to claimants regarding the withdrawal of sickness benefits. READ MORE

  3. 3. To dig or not to dig? An integrated post-structuralist analysis of the EU Critical Raw Materials Act and its justice implications for local communities

    University essay from Lunds universitet/LUCSUS

    Author : Valeska Götz; [2023]
    Keywords : critical materials; environmental justice; policy narrative; extractivism; sustainability science; Social Sciences;

    Abstract : In its proposed 2023 Critical Raw Materials Act, the European Commission considers access to critical raw materials within its territory as key to both the green transition and to reduce import dependencies. This onshoring of extractivist practices warrants a critical analysis that reflects on the justice implications this may have for local communities. READ MORE

  4. 4. (Em)powering community energy on Gotland : An exploration of energy justice through a case study of "an island in an island"

    University essay from Lunds universitet/LUCSUS

    Author : Frida Malin Møberg Mundbjerg; Marie Bredkjær Thomsen; [2023]
    Keywords : community energy; energy justice; island identity; local empowerment; energy transition; Gotland; sustainability science; Social Sciences;

    Abstract : The energy transition raises concerns about local communities' marginalisation in decision-making and ownership models, leading to justice debates. Community energy (CE) gains attention as a pathway towards energy justice (EJ). Drawing on qualitative data collected on Gotland, we examine how the Austerland CE project delivers EJ. READ MORE

  5. 5. Socioeconomic status and preferences for income inequality: A quantitative study using the International Social Survey Program Data

    University essay from Lunds universitet/Statsvetenskapliga institutionen

    Author : Aude Elisabeth Marguerite Carreau; [2023]
    Keywords : preferences; income inequality; socioeconomic status; meritocracy; social mobility; Law and Political Science;

    Abstract : People's preferences for income inequality vary, and this research investigates the influence of socioeconomic status on these preferences. Drawing on a structural position theory that considers individuals’ self-interest and rationality to be driven by their socioeconomic status, this paper examines the extent to which socioeconomic status affects the likelihood of accepting income inequality. READ MORE