Judicial decision-making and the use of panels in the South African Appellate Division, 1950-1990

Politikon ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-161
Author(s):  
Stacia Haynie
Obiter ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 806-830
Author(s):  
Adebola Olaborede ◽  
Lirieka Meintjes-van der Walt

Several empirical research studies have shown that cognitive bias can unconsciously distort inferences and interpretations made by judges either at the hearing, ruling or sentencing stage of a court trial and this may result in miscarriages of justice. This article examines how cognitive heuristics affects judicial decision-making with seven common manifestations of heuristics such as availability heuristics, confirmation bias, egocentric bias, anchoring, hindsight bias, framing and representativeness. This article contends that the different manifestations of heuristics pose a potentially serious risk to the quality and objectivity of any criminal case, despite the professional legal training and experience of judges and magistrates. Therefore, suggestions on how best to avoid and minimise the effects of cognitive heuristics, especially within South African courts are proffered. These include creating awareness raising, cross-examination and replacement.


Author(s):  
Michael Bishop

Peter Tosh’s plaintive – ‘Why must I cry?’ – is normally interpreted to be about a lost lover. It probably is. But I am going to propose a different reading. I am going to pretend that Peter Tosh is a conscientious South African judge with postmodernist and critical legal tendencies. This judge is concerned with the massive responsibility she feels as a judge in post-apartheid South Africa. Not only must she walk the lonely, lonely, lonely road of ordinary judicial office, she must bear the big heavy load of the specific social, economic and political circumstances that place added pressure on her to transform, both society and herself. At the same time, she is confronted with critical theories that seek to impose an even greater burden on her in the form of unanswerable calls to justice and unfulfillable duties to the other. These theories are, on the whole, framed in a way that is both critical of judges and largely pessimistic about the possibility of success. Many of the theories specifically require the judge to mourn her inability to do the impossible. For many reasons then, our hypothetical judge asks: ‘Why must I cry?’ My answer in brief is: She need not cry. She must not cry. I will argue that the best means to address the various responsibilities imposed on judicial officers is through laughter, not tears. I begin by detailing the ‘culture of justification’ that dominates both judicial and academic thinking (I will look specifically at Mureinik, Klare and Botha) and examine exactly what burdens this philosophy imposes on judges. Next I acknowledge that the burdens of justification, onerous as they may be, are not enough. I adopt Van der Walt’s ideal of ‘law as sacrifice’ to argue that all judges have the additional duty to acknowledge the sacrifices that are an inescapable part their profession. I conclude by looking at humour and the law. Humour in judicial decisions has played an often unnoticed role (more in America than South Africa!).


Author(s):  
Jeffrey J. Rachlinski ◽  
Chris Guthrie ◽  
Andrew J. Wistrich

Legal Studies ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Claire Hamilton

Abstract The changes to the Irish exclusionary rule introduced by the judgment in People (DPP) v JC mark an important watershed in the Irish law of evidence and Irish legal culture more generally. The case relaxed the exclusionary rule established in People (DPP) v Kenny, one of the strictest in the common law world, by creating an exception based on ‘inadvertence’. This paper examines the decision through the lens of legal culture, drawing in particular on Lawrence Friedman's distinction between ‘internal’ and ‘external’ legal culture to help understand the factors contributing to the decision. The paper argues that Friedman's concept and, in particular, the dialectic between internal and external legal culture, holds much utility at a micro as well as macro level, in interrogating the cultural logics at work in judicial decision-making.


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