JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE VS. BINDING PRECEDENT: A MISLEADING OBJECTION

Authors

  • Florencia Ratti M.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31054/2314.3061.v12.n1.35483

Keywords:

Judicial independence, Precedent, Judicial guarantee, Judge, Due process

Abstract

This paper revisits the notion of judicial independence and  its relationship with binding precedent in Ibero-America, with special
emphasis on the Argentinian and Brazilian legal systems. It evidences the prevalence of an idea of judicial independence as a guarantee for the judge instead of a guarantee for the parties, and states that such misconception causes an unfounded opposition to precedent. The work proposes a notion of judicial independence developed from the analysis of its essence and purpose. That proposition is inspired by principles contained in the “Código Modelo Iberoamericano de Ética Judicial” and the “Estatuto del Juez Iberoamericano”, both develo - ped during the Ibero-American Judicial Summit. Those documents  put parties in the core of the judicial process and conceives them as  the reason for judicial independence. Such perspective removes any  opposition between judicial independence and respect for what it has been decided in similar previous cases.

Author Biography

  • Florencia Ratti M.

    Doctor of Juridical Sciences (cum laude, Universidad Católica Argentina/UCA). Diploma in Constitutional Law (Universidad Austral). Researcher with Special Dedication (UCA). Lecturer in Constitutional Law, Legal-Political Thought Formation (UCA) and Doctrine and Jurisprudence Workshop (UNLZ). Fulbright Visiting Scholar (Boston College, MA). JSCA Visiting Scholar (Osgoode Hall, TO).

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Published

2021-11-09

Issue

Section

Doctrine and research

How to Cite

JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE VS. BINDING PRECEDENT: A MISLEADING OBJECTION. (2021). Revista De La Facultad De Derecho, 12(1), 133-158. https://doi.org/10.31054/2314.3061.v12.n1.35483