13:30 - 15:00
Panel Session 2
Room: Zoom
Chair/s:
Benjamin G. Engst, Daniel Naurin
(Non)Renewable Terms and Judicial Independence in the European Court of Human Rights
Øyvind Stiansen
PluriCourts, University of Oslo, Oslo

Do renewable terms compromise judicial independence? Scholars of various courts have demonstrated relationships between judges' voting patterns and the interests of actors responsible for their (re)appointment. However, it is typically unclear if such relationships are (at least partially) explained by judges acting strategically to achieve reappointment or if they are (fully) attributable to selection effects. I exploit a 2010 reform of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) to estimate the casual effect of removing reappointment opportunities on judges' independence. The ECtHR bench is composed of one judge from each member state and judges sit ex officio on cases involving their nominating state. Prior to 2010, terms were renewable and judges seeking reappointment were therefore incentivized to favor their nominating states. In 2010, the terms were made nonrenewable with immediate effect for judges serving on the Court. I show that removing reappointment opportunities significantly reduced judges' tendency to favor their nominating states.


Reference:
Fr-P6-01
Session:
Judicial independence and strategic decision-making in courts in an era of political polarization
Presenter/s:
Øyvind Stiansen
Topic:
EU Politics
Presentation type:
Oral presentation
Room:
Zoom
Chair/s:
Benjamin G. Engst, Daniel Naurin
Date:
Friday, 19 June
Time:
13:30 - 13:45
Session times:
13:30 - 15:00

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