< 2019 >
July
Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

Procedural Fairness

JSI President Judge Peggy Hora (Ret.), Vice President David Wallace, and CFO Judge Brian MacKenzie (Ret.) discuss procedural fairness and its role in therapeutic jurisprudence at the 36th International Congress on Law and Mental Health Italy.

More specifically: Therapeutic jurisprudence (TJ) says that the processes used by courts can promote outcomes connected with wellbeing such as respect for and trust in the justice system and the law and offender rehabilitation. To achieve this outcome structure of TJ is built upon the four key concepts of procedural fairness. Procedural fairness, is a subjective evaluation of a person’s experience in the justice system and is separate from the actual outcome of the case. While the result is important, an individual’s to accept court decisions is rooted in their perceptions of how they were treated during the process itself. Thus, procedural fairness critical component of TJ and to understanding how the public interprets their experience with the court system and how individuals that experience into a subjective valuation of the court system as whole.

TOP

Get more information like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list
and get interesting content and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Oops. Something went wrong.