Litigators’ Lack of Knowledge and Legal Ethics: An Analysis of Judges’ Narratives in Cases of Violence Against Women and Family Group Members

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In this article, we explore how a group of judges describe their experiences with the lack of knowledge displayed by lawyers who litigate before their courts. Through narrative interviews with five judges from the module of the National Specialized Justice System for the Protection and Punishment of...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Del Mastro Puccio, Fernando, Bazán Seminario, Cesar
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2025
Institución:Corte Suprema de Justicia de la República del Perú
Repositorio:Revista Oficial del Poder Judicial
Lenguaje:español
OAI Identifier:oai:revistas.pj.gob.pe:article/1273
Enlace del recurso:https://revistas.pj.gob.pe/revista/index.php/ropj/article/view/1273
Nivel de acceso:acceso abierto
Materia:legal ethics
violence against women
judicial reform
legal professions
virtues
ética de la abogacía
violencia contra la mujer
reforma de la justicia
profesiones jurídicas
virtudes
ética da advocacia
violência contra a mulher
reforma da justiça
profissões jurídicas
Descripción
Sumario:In this article, we explore how a group of judges describe their experiences with the lack of knowledge displayed by lawyers who litigate before their courts. Through narrative interviews with five judges from the module of the National Specialized Justice System for the Protection and Punishment of Violence against Women and Members of the Family Group (SNEJ), we find that litigators are portrayed as professionals who do not do their homework, fail to prepare, lack even the minimum knowledge required before entering a hearing, and normalize their own ignorance. In response to these situations, judges present themselves as figures of authority who seek to preserve the integrity of hearings by giving lawyers a few minutes to read the case file, guiding them so they can fulfill their role, reprimanding or firmly exhorting them, or even urging defendants to change lawyers, among other measures. By contrast, judges do not impose fines or formal sanctions, rarely invoke ineffective assistance of counsel, and do not report cases to bar associations. On several occasions, judges express doubts about the role they should play when confronted with litigators’ lack of knowledge. At the same time, for most judges, ignorance is problematic but does not properly constitute an ethical issue, since it does not involve an intention to deceive or cause harm, nor does it rise to problems such as corruption. In many cases, there does not appear to be a clear conception of what constitutes a violation of professional ethics in litigation.
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