Arnone, Massimo and Costantiello, Alberto and Drago, Carlo and Leogrande, Angelo (2024): When Justice Lags: Civic Engagement, Deprivation, and Institutional Performance.
![]() |
PDF
MPRA_paper_124549.pdf Download (1MB) |
Abstract
The socio-economic and institutional factors explaining the length of civil proceedings (LCP) over the 2004-2022 time frame are analyzed here in 20 Italian regions. Adopting panel data analysis approaches, such as fixed-effects, random-effects, and two-stage least squares (2SLS) instrumental variables, the analysis investigates the effects of income inequality, material poverty, labor market disengagement, economic family distress, civic and political participation, and non-profit density on trial length. Results identify a significant positive association between net income inequality, intensity of work poverty, deterioration of household economic conditions, and civic and political participation and an increased length of proceedings. The findings suggest that structural socio-economic vulnerability and increased legal demand in civically active regions are factors prolonging proceedings. In contrast, non-profit density is strongly and inversely associated with trial length, suggesting their effectiveness in promoting institutional efficiency. Instrumental variables sourced in environmental, infrastructural, and sustainability indicators provide assurance of the robustness of these associations. The research stresses that legal inefficiencies are not peculiar exceptions but are part of deeply embedded and intricate systems of the wider society, economy, and the natural environment. Policy conclusions point to the necessity of integrated governance responses that interlink legal reform with social equity, civic empowerment, and environmental resilience to promote both the timeliness of justice and institutional accountability in regional settings.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | When Justice Lags: Civic Engagement, Deprivation, and Institutional Performance |
English Title: | When Justice Lags: Civic Engagement, Deprivation, and Institutional Performance |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Civil Proceedings Duration, Income Inequality, Socioeconomic Deprivation, Civic Engagement, Institutional Efficiency. |
Subjects: | I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I3 - Welfare, Well-Being, and Poverty > I38 - Government Policy ; Provision and Effects of Welfare Programs K - Law and Economics > K4 - Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior > K40 - General K - Law and Economics > K4 - Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior > K41 - Litigation Process O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O4 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity > O43 - Institutions and Growth R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics > R2 - Household Analysis > R23 - Regional Migration ; Regional Labor Markets ; Population ; Neighborhood Characteristics |
Item ID: | 124549 |
Depositing User: | Dr Angelo Leogrande |
Date Deposited: | 26 Apr 2025 10:17 |
Last Modified: | 26 Apr 2025 10:17 |
References: | Wu, L., Kim, S. K., & Lin, C. (2022). Socioeconomic groups and their green spaces availability in urban areas of China: A distributional justice perspective. Environmental Science & Policy, 131, 26-35. Abdussamad, Z., Harun, A. A., Muhtar, M. H., Puluhulawa, F. U., Swarianata, V., & Elfikri, N. F. (2024). Constitutional balance: Synchronizing energy and environmental policies with socio-economic mandates. In E3S Web of Conferences (Vol. 506, p. 06006). EDP Sciences. Ahmed, N., Chowdhury, A. M., Urmi, T., & Jamal, L. (2023). Impact of socio-economic factors on female students’ enrollments in science, technology, engineering and mathematics and workplace challenges in Bangladesh. American Behavioral Scientist, 67(9), 1104-1121. Alang, S., & Blackstock, O. (2023). Health justice: A framework for mitigating the impacts of HIV and COVID-19 on disproportionately affected communities. American Journal of Public Health, 113(2), 194-201. Alibhai, K. M., Ziegler, B. R., Meddings, L., Batung, E., & Luginaah, I. (2022). Factors impacting antenatal care utilization: a systematic review of 37 fragile and conflict-affected situations. Conflict and health, 16(1), 33. Ayub, M., Khan, K., Khan, M., & Ismail, M. (2024). Waqf for accelerating socioeconomic development: a proposed model with focus on Pakistan. Qualitative Research in Financial Markets, (ahead-of-print). Benfer, E. A., Bhandary-Alexander, J., Cannon, Y., Makhlouf, M. D., & Pierson-Brown, T. (2021). Setting the health justice agenda: addressing health inequity & injustice in the post-pandemic clinic. Clinical L. Rev., 28, 45. Bhatnagar, R. S., & Padilla-Zakour, O. I. (2021). Plant-based dietary practices and socioeconomic factors that influence anemia in India. Nutrients, 13(10), 3538. Bixby, L. E. (2023). Disability is not a burden: the relationship between early childhood disability and maternal health depends on family socioeconomic status. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 64(3), 354-369. Botero, S. (2023). Courts that Matter: Activists, Judges, and the Politics of Rights Enforcement. Cambridge University Press. Brito, T. L., Sabbeth, K. A., Steinberg, J. K., & Sudeall, L. (2022). Racial capitalism in the civil courts. Colum. L. Rev., 122, 1243. Cannon, Y. (2021). Closing the health justice gap: access to justice in furtherance of health equity. Colum. Hum. Rts. L. Rev., 53, 517. Casey, J. A., Cushing, L., Depsky, N., & Morello-Frosch, R. (2021). Climate justice and California’s methane superemitters: Environmental equity assessment of community proximity and exposure intensity. Environmental science & technology, 55(21), 14746-14757. Chadee, A., Ali, H., Gallage, S., & Rathnayake, U. (2023). Modelling the implications of delayed payments on contractors’ cashflows on infrastructure projects. Chowkwanyun, M. (2023). Environmental justice: where it has been, and where it might be going. Annual review of public health, 44(1), 93-111. Consolazio, D., Murtas, R., Tunesi, S., Gervasi, F., Benassi, D., & Russo, A. G. (2021). Assessing the impact of individual characteristics and neighborhood socioeconomic status during the COVID-19 pandemic in the provinces of Milan and Lodi. International Journal of Health Services, 51(3), 311-324. Cvetković, V. M., & Šišović, V. (2024). Understanding the sustainable development of community (social) disaster resilience in Serbia: Demographic and socio-economic impacts. Sustainability, 16(7), 2620. DeBray, E., Finnigan, K. S., George, J., & Scott, J. (2022). A Civil Rights Framework for the Reauthorization of ESEA. National Education Policy Center. DeMarco, L. M., Dwyer, R. E., & Haynie, D. L. (2021). The accumulation of disadvantage: Criminal justice contact, credit, and debt in the transition to adulthood. Criminology, 59(3), 545-580. Denvir, C., Kinghan, J., Mant, J., & Newman, D. (2023). Legal aid and the future of access to justice (p. 288). Bloomsbury Academic. Doğan, E., & Genç, H. D. (2021, March). Early-responding civil society and a late coming state: Findings from Turkey during the pandemic. In Nonprofit Policy Forum (Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 127-146). De Gruyter. Eden, C. A., Chisom, O. N., & Adeniyi, I. S. (2024). Education policy and social change: Examining the impact of reform initiatives on equity and access. International Journal of Science and Research Archive, 11(2), 139-146. Elenbaas, L., & Mistry, R. S. (2021). Distributive justice in society and among peers: 8-to 14-year-olds’ views on economic stratification inform their decisions about access to opportunities. Developmental Psychology, 57(6), 951. Forde, S., Kappler, S., & Björkdahl, A. (2021). Peacebuilding, structural violence and spatial reparations in post-colonial South Africa. Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, 15(3), 327-346. Han, J., & Yang, Y. (2021). The socioeconomic effects of extreme drought events in northern China on the Ming dynasty in the late fifteenth century. Climatic Change, 164(3), 26. Hasan, M. I., & Rupa, F. J. (2021). Digitalization of Bangladesh judiciary and access to justice. Asian Journal of Social Sciences and Legal Studies, 3(3), 49-58. Heywood, M. (2021). Economic Policy and the Socio-Economic Rights in the South African Constitution, 1996–2021: Why Don’t They Talk to Each Other?. Constitutional Court Review, 11(1), 1-37. Jahn, J. L., Zubizarreta, D., Chen, J. T., Needham, B. L., Samari, G., McGregor, A. J., ... & Agénor, M. (2023). Legislating inequity: structural racism in groups of state laws and associations with premature mortality rates: study examines the combined harmful effects of state laws and structural racism’s association with premature mortality rates. Health Affairs, 42(10), 1325-1333. Jolly, R. L., Hans, V. P., & Peck, R. S. (2022). Democratic renewal and the civil jury. Ga. L. Rev., 57, 79. Kalt, T. (2021). Jobs vs. climate justice? Contentious narratives of labor and climate movements in the coal transition in Germany. Environmental Politics, 30(7), 1135-1154. Khassawneh, O., & Abaker, M. O. S. M. (2022). Human resource management in the United Arab Emirates: Towards a better understanding. In HRM in the Global South: A critical perspective (pp. 103-128). Cham: Springer International Publishing. Lerner, M., & Rottman, J. (2021). The burden of climate action: How environmental responsibility is impacted by socioeconomic status. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 77, 101674. Leung, L., Hepburn, P., & Desmond, M. (2021). Serial eviction filing: Civil courts, property management, and the threat of displacement. Social Forces, 100(1), 316-344. Li, A., & Hu, A. (2021). Community contexts, socioeconomic status, and meritocratic beliefs and perceptions in China. Chinese journal of sociology, 7(3), 470-493. Liu, Y., Anser, M. K., & Zaman, K. (2021). Ecofeminism and natural resource management: justice delayed, justice denied. Sustainability, 13(13), 7319. Llanos, A. A., Ashrafi, A., Ghosh, N., Tsui, J., Lin, Y., Fong, A. J., ... & Heckman, C. J. (2023). Evaluation of inequities in cancer treatment delay or discontinuation following SARS-CoV-2 infection. JAMA Network Open, 6(1), e2251165-e2251165. Lord, B. D., Harris, A. R., & Ambs, S. (2023). The impact of social and environmental factors on cancer biology in Black Americans. Cancer Causes & Control, 34(3), 191-203. Melcarne, A., & Ramello, G. B. (2021). Is justice delayed justice denied? An empirical approach. International Review of Law and Economics, 65, 105953. Mentovich, A., Prescott, J. J., & Rabinovich-Einy, O. (2023). Legitimacy and online proceedings: Procedural justice, access to justice, and the role of income. Law & Society Review, 57(2), 189-213. Ogilvie, J. M., & Kisely, S. (2022). Examining the health and criminal justice characteristics for young people on compulsory community treatment orders: An Australian birth cohort and data linkage study. International Journal of Law and Psychiatry, 83, 101813. Presler, C. (2021). Mutual deference between hospitals and courts: how mandated reporting from medical providers harms families. Columbia Journal of Race and Law, 11(3), 733-766. Ritchie, L. A., & Long, M. A. (2021). Psychosocial impacts of post-disaster compensation processes: community-wide avoidance behaviors. Social Science & Medicine, 270, 113640. Shanahan, C. F., Steinberg, J. K., Mark, A., & Carpenter, A. E. (2022). The institutional mismatch of state civil courts. Columbia Law Review, 122(5), 1471-1537. Voukkali, I., Papamichael, I., Economou, F., Loizia, P., Klontza, E., Lekkas, D. F., ... & Zorpas, A. A. (2023). Factors affecting social attitude and behavior for the transition towards a circular economy. Sustainable Chemistry and Pharmacy, 36, 101276. Wang, J., & Hulme, C. (2021). Frailty and socioeconomic status: a systematic review. Journal of Public Health Research, 10(3), jphr-2021. Wang, Y., Apte, J. S., Hill, J. D., Ivey, C. E., Johnson, D., Min, E., ... & Marshall, J. D. (2023). Air quality policy should quantify effects on disparities. Science, 381(6655), 272-274. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/124549 |