Lazy data? Using administrative records in research on judicial systems

Autores/as

  • Brian Opeskin University of Technology Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35295/osls.iisl.1624

Palabras clave:

archivos administrativos, tribunales, investigación empírica, agencias gubernamentales, jueces

Resumen

La investigación en ciencias sociales sobre tribunales y jueces requiere datos que suelen generarse a través de encuestas, entrevistas u observación con el fin de responder a preguntas de investigación concretas planteadas por el investigador. Sin embargo, los métodos tradicionales de recopilación de datos no siempre son factibles. Como alternativa, este artículo examina el uso de datos administrativos, que han sido recogidos con fines ajenos a la investigación, en la investigación judicial. Utilizando como estudios de caso las investigaciones realizadas por el autor durante la última década, el artículo examina las fuentes potenciales de datos administrativos sobre tribunales y jueces, cómo pueden ser adquiridos y los usos que se les puede dar. A continuación, el artículo evalúa las ventajas e inconvenientes de la utilización de datos administrativos, que varían sustancialmente según la fuente de datos. El artículo concluye coincidiendo con Babbie (2020) en que “con tantos datos ya recopilados, la falta de fondos para apoyar la costosa recopilación de datos no es razón para no hacer una investigación social buena y útil” sobre los sistemas judiciales.

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Biografía del autor/a

Brian Opeskin, University of Technology Sydney

Brian Opeskin joined Macquarie Law School in December 2008 as Professor of Legal Governance. He is currently co-director of the Centre for Legal Governance, a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Law, and a member of the Australian Research Council's College of Experts.

Brian previously held positions as Head of the Law School at the University of the South Pacific in Vanuatu (2006-2008); Commissioner and then Deputy President of the Australian Law Reform Commission (2000-2006), legal academic at Sydney University Law School (1989-2000); and Associate to Justice Mason at the High Court of Australia (1985-1986).

He undertook his undergraduate degrees in economics and law at the University of New South Wales. He then pursued postgraduate study at Oxford University on a Shell Australia scholarship, before returning to Australia to take up an academic appointment. He also has a Master of Social Research in Demography from the Australian National University.

Brian researches and teaches in the broad field of public law, and has written extensively in the areas of constitutional law; courts and judges; migration law; and public international law. While at the Australian Law Reform Commission, he was the Commissioner in charge of five public inquiries, including inquiries into federal judicial power, the protection of human genetic information, gene patenting and human health, sentencing of federal offenders, and sedition laws.

His current research examines issues of governance and legal policy relating to international migration, judges and court systems. He has a particular interest in interdisciplinary research that examines the intersections between principles of public law and demographic processes, and has a special interest in Pacific legal systems.

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Publicado

2023-07-06 — Actualizado el 2023-12-20

Cómo citar

Opeskin, B. (2023) «Lazy data? Using administrative records in research on judicial systems», Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 13(S1), pp. S145-S170. doi: 10.35295/osls.iisl.1624.