ISLL Papers Table of Contents THE LITERARY JUDGE: A DUTCH EXPERIENCE THE LITERARY JUDGE: A DUTCH EXPERIENCE

Jeanne Gaakeer, José Calvo González, Curvo Direito, Trad, Karam De André, Luis Trindade, Rosenfield, Dino Pino, Giovanni, Jeanne Gaakeer, Jeanne Gaakeer
2013 Giustizia e letteratura 1, Vita e Pensiero   unpublished
Orlando Roselli, Il diritto come linguaggio. Riflessioni sulle trasformazioni del linguaggio e delle funzioni del diritto (The Law as Language. Reflections on the transformation of language and the functions of law) Maria Francisca Carneiro, Law and Proportions: Interdisciplinary and Semiotic Foundations for an Idea of Justice Pablo Sánchez Iglesias, Chronicle Of A Death Foretold. Collective Guilt Disguised As Fatality Alessandro Salvador, "La musica è un tutto" e il diritto? Riflessioni di un
more » ... iurista a margine di un recente libro di Daniel Barenboim ("Music is a whole" and Law? Some thoughts from a legal standpoint on a recent book by Daniel Barenboim) Massimiliano Orazi, La giustizia di Dürrenmatt. Diritto, giustizia e letteratura (The Dürrenmatt's Justice: Law, Justice and Literature) Francesco Zini, Excursus: arti figurative e diritto. Postmodernità giuridica e arte informale: oltre la misura della regola e della figura (Excursus: Arts and law-Postmodernity legal and informal art: beyond the measure of the rule and the figure) Sabrina Peron, Come un cane! il processo, la colpa, la vergogna, la sopravvivenza (Like a dog! Process, Guilt, Shame, Survival) Csaba Varga, Literature? A Substitute for Legal Philosophy? Abstract In this essay, Gaakeer provides an overview of a concrete experience in Law and Literature from the Netherlands, namely, a Law and Literature course which she designed a few years ago with the Dutch Training and Study Centre for the Judiciary, and which she is still teaching with that centre: the course, titled "Language, Literature, and the Judiciary," reached its fourth year in 2013 and is part of the permanent curriculum for the training of Dutch judges. Abstract In this contribution to the 2013 IVR Special Workshop "Law and Literature: experiences from my country" I provide an overview of a very concrete experience of Law and Literature from my country the Netherlands, namely of a Law and Literature course that I co-designed a few years ago and that I co-taught for the fourth time this year: "Language, Literature and the Judiciary" in collaboration with the Dutch Training and Study Centre for the Judiciary as part of Dutch professional judges' permanent education. With it I hope to elicit not only dialogue on this subject and its methodological aspects, but also suggestions from scholars from other countries and other jurisdictions, for the elaboration of the course and possibly for further international cooperation , on the view that such courses are good examples of how to join theory and practice in law and the humanities, that can at the same time contribute to the development of this interdisciplinary field itself.
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