Abstract
This contribution offers an insight into the legal practice of the Aranyosi test during the EAW proceedings in seven Member States, an outcome of the research conducted during the ImprovEAW Project. Only the executing judicial authorities of some Member States do trigger the test. Member States are roughly differentiated between those having facilities with usually bad or usually good detention conditions, promoting antagonistic relationships instead of equal partnership. The lack of streamlining of the communication when supplementary information is requested, the lack of common standards and approach towards guarantees lead to further misunderstandings and frustration. The findings of this research have revealed the importance of departing from a pure legal understanding of mutual trust and follow a more empirical, experiential or bottom-up concept. Mutual trust is not only a legal concept, but it underpins the legal culture of the cooperation and collegial attitudes of authorities towards one another. This expression of mutual trust remains quite undiscovered: how is miscommunication affecting mutual trust? Do judicial authorities of legal systems express collegiality to one another? How do cultural aspects and preconceived ideas regarding the quality of other legal systems influence mutual trust? Accordingly, some suggestions have been made to improve the cooperation and the establishment of rapport when supplementary information is requested. Finally, I advocate for a more neutral view towards the Aranyosi test. As opposed to considering it as a supervisory mechanism, I have explored the idea of approaching it as a risk management tool: it tackles risks created by mutual trust. Such approach helps both sides to take responsibility to avert ad hoc risks, instead of experiencing Aranyosi as a testing moment. Such approach centres the real problem, i.e. the risks created by mutual trust for individuals and it can stimulate more proactive policy-making in this regard.
Publisher
Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawla II
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference26 articles.
1. Part of the research in this contribution was conducted under the EU-funded project ImprovEAW (2020-2022).
2. Barbosa, Renata, Vincent Glerum, Hans Kijlstra, André Klip, and Christina Peristeridou. Improving the European Arrest Warrant. Den Haag: Eleven, 2023.
3. Barbosa, Renata, Vincent Glerum, Hans Kijlstra, André Klip, Christina Peristeridou, Małgorzata Wąsek-Wiaderek, and Adrian Zbiciak. European Arrest Warrant: Practice in Greece, the Netherlands and Poland. Den Haag: Eleven, 2022.
4. Bárd, Petra, and Wouter van Ballegooij “Judicial Independence as a Precondition for Mutual Trust? The CJEU in Minister for Justice and Equality v. LM.” New Journal of European Criminal Law 9, no. 3 (2018): 353–365. https://doi.org/10.1177/2032284418801569.
5. Bárd, Petra, and Wouter van Ballegooij. “The Effect of CJEU Case Law Concerning the Rule of Law and Mutual Trust on National Systems.” In The Court of Justice and European Criminal Law: Leading Cases in a Contextual Analysis, edited by Valsamis Mitsilegas, Albert di Martino, and Leandro Mancano, 455–467. Chicago: Hart Publishing, 2019.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献