Networking the Rule of Law:
How Change Agents Reshape Judicial Governance in the
EU
by Cristina Dallara (Author), Daniela Piana (Author)
Judicial networks have proved effective in influencing
recent judicial policies enacted by both old and new EU member states. However,
this influence has not been standard. This volume seeks to improve our
understanding of how networks function, as well as the extent they matter in
the governance of a constitutional democracy. The authors examine the judicial
function of networks, the way they cross the legal and territorial borders that
confine the jurisdiction of the domestic institutions, and whether or not they
are independent of the capacity and the leadership of their members. A highly
salient issue in contemporary law and politics, judicial networks are now qualified
actors of governance. With the aim to understand how, to what extent, and with
what consequences networks interact with hierarchical institutions that still
exist within the States, this book is essential reading for legal experts,
policy makers engaged in promoting the rule of law, members of the judicial
networks in the EU and extra EU countries, as well as academics and students.