Abstract

The problems of improving the mechanism of fairer justice are considered. The author is convinced that justice is a feeling, and it is not formalized, it is subjective, and therefore it is impossible to induce (force, etc.) a judge to make more just judicial acts. But it is possible to legislate, organizationally and scientifically (that is, from the outside) to ensure that the judge more fully realizes his sense of justice in the administration of justice. The article examines the problems of selecting candidates for judges who are initially predisposed to commit more just actions; collective intelligence in the judicial process, which provides a fairer justice than that of a single judge; deep specialization throughout the entire vertical of the judicial system, based on the premise that a judge specializing in a narrow category of cases becomes a high-level professional, therefore, the judicial acts rendered by him are more fair

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