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Portrait Lisa Flower. Photo.

Lisa Flower

Associate Professor | Senior Lecturer | Coordinator for Qualitative Methods Lab | Excellent teaching practitioner

Portrait Lisa Flower. Photo.

Virtual Justice Rituals : A Sociological Examination of the Transition from Physical Presence to Virtual Participation

Author

  • Lisa Flower

Summary, in English

This paper explores the sociological impact of transitioning justice rituals in physical criminal courtrooms to virtual justice rituals. Traditionally, criminal courtroom rituals – often associated with formal architecture, dress codes, and ceremonial symbols but also including fuzzier aspects such as sensorial experiences and atmospheres – are understood as reinforcing authority, fairness, and legitimacy. In virtual settings, however, these significant cues may become diluted or lost, affecting participants’ perceptions of trial solemnity and legitimacy. By analyzing the dynamics of virtual justice rituals this paper sheds light on how digital platforms reshape foundational trial elements and will discuss the need to adapt judicial practices, ensuring that the symbolic and procedural integrity of criminal trials is preserved, thus maintaining public trust in remote justice. This research contributes to broader discussions on how digitalization influences authority, legitimacy, and transparency in legal contexts.

Department/s

  • Department of Sociology

Publishing year

2025-06-27

Language

English

Pages

64-83

Publication/Series

European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice

Volume

33

Issue

1-2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Martinus Nijhoff Publishers

Topic

  • Criminology

Status

Published

Project

  • The elusive role of physicality in virtual trials: Towards a new understanding of legal participation

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0928-9569