concept

procedural justice

Also known as: procedural justice, procedural justice model, procedural fairness, procedural equity

Facts (12)

Sources
Parent–child attachment and adolescent problematic behavior frontiersin.org Frontiers Feb 26, 2025 4 facts
referenceWestern research on legal emotions is rooted in individualistic cultures and emphasizes the impact of the procedural justice model on individual legal socialization.
referenceTrinkner, R., and Cohn, E. S. (2014) published the article 'Putting the "social" back in legal socialization: procedural justice, legitimacy, and cynicism in legal and nonlegal authorities' in Law and Human Behavior, volume 38, pages 602–617.
referenceJonathan-Zamir, Mastrofski, and Moyal (2015) researched the measurement of procedural justice in police-citizen encounters, published in Justice Quarterly.
referenceA. Bottoms and J. Tankebe published 'Beyond procedural justice: a dialogic approach to legitimacy in criminal justice' in the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology in 2012.
Energy Equity and Just Transitions understand-energy.stanford.edu Stanford University 4 facts
claimThe spectrum of community engagement aims to shift power to marginalized, frontline communities to achieve procedural and distributive justice.
claimCommunity engagement is a critical component of procedural equity in just energy transitions because it empowers communities with agency and decision-making power, elevates local knowledge, mitigates social disparities, and fosters public trust.
claimThe four core tenets of energy justice are distributive justice, procedural justice, recognition justice, and restorative justice, which together form a framework to identify injustices and understand affected populations.
claimThe four tenets of energy justice (distributive, procedural, recognition, and restorative) are deeply interdependent and difficult to apply in isolation; for example, improving procedural justice requires the proper recognition of stakeholders.
Navigating Tensions in Just Energy Transitions kleinmanenergy.upenn.edu Kleinman Center for Energy Policy Aug 20, 2025 1 fact
referenceEnergy justice frameworks utilize a tenet approach where transitions are constrained or enabled by three factors: distributional justice (infrastructure siting and energy access), justice as recognition (who is affected and who is marginalized), and procedural justice (the fairness of decision-making processes).
Geopolitics of the energy transition: between global challenges and ... geoprogress-edition.eu Simona Epasto · Geoprogress Edition Oct 26, 2025 1 fact
claimStrategies for energy transition should include distributive and procedural justice, technology transfers, worker training, and local community involvement in decision-making.
Energy asset stranding in resource-rich developing countries and ... frontiersin.org Frontiers Jun 10, 2024 1 fact
perspectiveThe authors of the article 'Energy asset stranding in resource-rich developing countries and...' argue that profiting from fossil fuel imports while leaving exporting nations to deal with the consequences of climate policy violates procedural justice, which is necessary for a just energy transition.
A Comprehensive Review of Neuro-symbolic AI for Robustness ... link.springer.com Springer Dec 9, 2025 1 fact
referenceEthical deployment of neuro-symbolic systems requires supporting procedural fairness and democratic accountability through mechanisms such as human-in-the-loop intervention, the ability to audit and revise symbolic logic, and participatory rule curation that reflects diverse values, as suggested in reference [186].