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Generating Trust Through Law? – Judicial Cooperation in the European Union and the 'Principle of Mutual Trust'

TLDR
In this article, the authors ask whether the project to promote trust through law is a promising one, and, eventually, how to reinterpret statutory provisions and legal principles that purport to generate trust amongst their addressees.
Abstract
For a long time, EU institutions have emphasized the connection between one of the most important concepts of the integration method, mutual recognition, and the presence of mutual trust between EU Member States. Only recently, the ECJ reaffirmed in its Opinion 2/13 that mutual trust is at the heart of the EU and a “fundamental premiss” of the European legal structure. But can law really restore, advance or even govern by trust? This question is crucial for the EU of today, which finds itself in the midst of a severe crisis of trust. For the EU as a community “based on the rule of law” generating trust through law might seem the natural, maybe the only politically viable response to a crisis of trust. Nevertheless, even if one agrees that the rule of law requires people to place trust in legal rules, and that courts and administrative agencies need to trust each other in order to work efficiently and consistently, how would legal rules be able to generate or promote trust? Moreover, isn’t it deeply rooted in our ideas about constitutional government that democratic law must institutionalize mutual distrust rather than govern by trust? These conceptual and normative objections did not stop the European Union from pursuing the project of trust-building through law in one of the most sensitive areas of EU law, judicial cooperation in civil and criminal matters. This Article will ask whether the project to promote trust through law is a promising one, and, eventually, how to reinterpret statutory provisions and legal principles that purport to generate trust amongst their addressees.

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Trust in the Law? : Mutual Recognition as a Justification to Domestic Criminal Procedure

TL;DR: The relationship between mutual trust and mutual recognition in domestic criminal procedure is discussed in this article, where it is shown that mutual trust as a legal and sociological concept is a constraint to EU action.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The effectiveness of mutual trust in civil and criminal law in the eu

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors address these aspects from different point of views: cross-border cooperation in criminal matters and in civil matters in order to determine whether "mutual trust" really exists between the designated stakeholders in criminal and civil matters, and try to identify the reasons for the drawbacks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Oxytocin increases trust in humans

TL;DR: It is shown that intranasal administration of oxytocin, a neuropeptide that plays a key role in social attachment and affiliation in non-human mammals, causes a substantial increase in trust among humans, thereby greatly increasing the benefits from social interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculativeness, Trust, and Economic Organization

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define and delimit the elusive notion of trust in the context of economic organization and use it to define and define uses of trust of a personal kind.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Social Control of Impersonal Trust

TL;DR: The authors explores the sources and consequences of the paradox that the guardians of trust are themselves trustees, and discovers that the resulting collection of procedural norms, structural constraints, entry restrictions, policing mechanisms, social-control specialists, and insurance-like arrangements increases the opportunities for abuse while it encourages less acceptable trustee performance.
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