Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms

Independence is commonly underscored as a key characteristic of courts and the judiciary. The independence of a court refers to its separation from other branches of state power that do not have commanding or supervisory powers over courts. Judicial independence implies the absence of influence by o...

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Main Author: Hadži Stević Brano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Law, Niš 2025-01-01
Series:Zbornik Radova Pravnog Fakulteta u Nišu
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Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-8501/2025/0350-85012504101H.pdf
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author Hadži Stević Brano
author_facet Hadži Stević Brano
author_sort Hadži Stević Brano
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description Independence is commonly underscored as a key characteristic of courts and the judiciary. The independence of a court refers to its separation from other branches of state power that do not have commanding or supervisory powers over courts. Judicial independence implies the absence of influence by other entities (particularly state authorities) on judicial conduct, running the legal process and outcomes of judicial proceedings. In addition to independence, another important feature is the impartiality of judges, which implies that a judge's must act without prejudice in judicial proceedings. It means that a judge must treat the participants in the process (the plaintiff, the defendant, witnesses) equally, without bias or without favouring any participant. Without diminishing the importance of the independence and impartiality of judges, neutrality is an equally valuable judicial characteristic. Judicial neutrality refers to a judge's attitude toward the positive law. In the legal reasoning process, a judge is obliged to consider the applicable (positive) law as the exclusive reason for deciding and justifying the judicial decision. The institutional role of a court is not to evaluate the substantive validity of the positive law but to apply it to the specific case. Thus, it is not up to a judge to correct the substantive errors of the legislator or another lawmaker. If a judge evaluates the positive law and departs from it due to his/her substantive or moral views, it is not considered legal reasoning. Yet, it does not mean that a judge should ignore the values contained in the positive law but, rather, that a judge must not replace the lawmaker's value judgments with one's own value judgments because the judge's duty is to resolve legal disputes from a legal point of view.
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spelling doaj-art-c9f8285c5b724d4091888b7e73a029cd2025-08-20T03:19:25ZengFaculty of Law, NišZbornik Radova Pravnog Fakulteta u Nišu0350-85012560-31162025-01-016410410112010.5937/zrpfn1-571080350-85012504101HNeutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related termsHadži Stević Brano0https://orcid.org/0009-0001-0844-3450Univerzitet u Istočnom Sarajevu, Pravni fakultet, Pale, Republika SrpskaIndependence is commonly underscored as a key characteristic of courts and the judiciary. The independence of a court refers to its separation from other branches of state power that do not have commanding or supervisory powers over courts. Judicial independence implies the absence of influence by other entities (particularly state authorities) on judicial conduct, running the legal process and outcomes of judicial proceedings. In addition to independence, another important feature is the impartiality of judges, which implies that a judge's must act without prejudice in judicial proceedings. It means that a judge must treat the participants in the process (the plaintiff, the defendant, witnesses) equally, without bias or without favouring any participant. Without diminishing the importance of the independence and impartiality of judges, neutrality is an equally valuable judicial characteristic. Judicial neutrality refers to a judge's attitude toward the positive law. In the legal reasoning process, a judge is obliged to consider the applicable (positive) law as the exclusive reason for deciding and justifying the judicial decision. The institutional role of a court is not to evaluate the substantive validity of the positive law but to apply it to the specific case. Thus, it is not up to a judge to correct the substantive errors of the legislator or another lawmaker. If a judge evaluates the positive law and departs from it due to his/her substantive or moral views, it is not considered legal reasoning. Yet, it does not mean that a judge should ignore the values contained in the positive law but, rather, that a judge must not replace the lawmaker's value judgments with one's own value judgments because the judge's duty is to resolve legal disputes from a legal point of view.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-8501/2025/0350-85012504101H.pdfjudgeindependenceimpartialityneutralitypositive lawvalues
spellingShingle Hadži Stević Brano
Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
Zbornik Radova Pravnog Fakulteta u Nišu
judge
independence
impartiality
neutrality
positive law
values
title Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
title_full Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
title_fullStr Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
title_full_unstemmed Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
title_short Neutrality as a judicial virtue: Essence, significance and related terms
title_sort neutrality as a judicial virtue essence significance and related terms
topic judge
independence
impartiality
neutrality
positive law
values
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0350-8501/2025/0350-85012504101H.pdf
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