Netherlands

Region Western and Central Europe

National Report

Summary of Contents

1. GENERAL INFORMATION

1.1. Form of government

The Kingdom of the Netherlands consists of four parts: the Netherlands, Curaçao, Sint Maarten and Aruba (which seceded from the Netherlands Antilles in 1986). Prior to 1975, Suriname was also part of the Kingdom. In 2010 the Netherlands Antilles were dissolved and Curaçao and Sint Maarten became constituent countries within the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Bonaire, St Eustatius and Saba became direct parts of the Netherlands.[1]

The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy. This means that the head of state is a King or Queen whose powers are laid down in the Constitution. In the Netherlands the powers of the monarch are extremely limited. Under the Constitution, the ministers, and not the monarch, are responsible for what the Government does.[2]

Dutch governments as a rule are formed by coalitions of a number of political parties owing to the electoral system of proportional representation. The government consists of ministers and state secretaries. Each ministry is headed by a government minister. There are also ‘ministers without portfolio’, who are not in charge of a ministry.

A minister may be supported by one or more state secretaries, who are entrusted with some of the minister’s tasks. The job descriptions of the state secretaries are published in the Government Gazette after their appointment and often change from government to government. If a minister is absent, a state secretary will usually stand in for them. The state secretary will, for example, attend Cabinet meetings in the minister’s place, but does not have the right to vote. A state secretary also attends Cabinet meetings if the agenda includes a topic for which he or she is responsible.

The King and the ministers together make up the Government of the Netherlands. The ministers and state secretaries are responsible for the day-to-day business of government. On 26 October 2017 the third government led by Mark Rutte took office.

1.2. Demographics, ethnic groups, languages and religion

The Netherlands has more than 17 million (17.181.084 on January 1st of 2019) registered inhabitants.[3] About 76% of them were born in the Netherlands and 24% were born elsewhere. The largest groups of migrants were born in Germany (2%), Indonesia (2%), Morocco (2%), Turkey (2%), and Suriname (2%).

The official language of the Netherlands is Dutch, spoken by almost all (native) people in the Netherlands. There are also some recognized provincial languages and regional dialects.[4]

In 2015, Statistics Netherlands, the Dutch government institute that gathers statistical information about the Netherlands, found that 50.1% of the adult population declared to be not religious. Christians comprised 43.8% of the total population and were divided between Catholics with 23.7% and the members of the Protestant Church of the Netherlands with 15.5%, members of other Christian denominations were the 4.6%. Islam comprised 4.9% of the total population, Hinduism 0.6%, Buddhism 0.4% and Judaism 0.1%. A large majority of the Dutch population believes that religion should not have a determining role to play in politics and education. Religion is also decreasingly seen as a social binder, and is generally considered a personal matter which should not be propagated in public.[5]

1.3. Gross domestic product (GDP) and gross national income (GNI)

Year GDP

in (million) Euro[6]

GNI (PPP), Atlas method

in (million) US$[7]

2009 655,958 53,670
2010 664,765 53,900
2011 675,077 54,480
2012 668,121 52,930
2013 667,252 52,950
2014 676,749 51,980
2015 690,008 49,810
2016 705,131 46,900
2017 725,657 46,870
2018 744,505 51,260

1.4. Human development indicators

The inequality index in the Netherlands is 0.28.[8]

In 2017 the poverty figure was just under 939,000. That is 5.7% of the Dutch population.[9] People on welfare, non-Western immigrants, and single mothers with underage children run the greatest risk of poverty, according to the SCP. In 2016 a total of 280 thousand children lived in poor homes, almost 9 percent of all Dutch kids.[10]

Life expectancy at birth is 81.78 years (in 2018). For women the life expectancy is somewhat higher (83.33 years) than for men (80.16 years).

On average 1.59 children are born per woman (2018).[11]

The expected years of schooling are 18 years, somewhat higher for women (18.3 years) than for men (17.8 years). People in the Netherlands on average receive 12.2 years of schooling (women 11.9, men 12.5 years).[12]

Netherlands’ HDI value for 2017 is 0.931— which puts the country in the very high human development category—positioning it at 10 out of 189 countries and territories. Between 1990 and 2017, Netherlands’ HDI value increased from 0.829 to 0.931, an increase of 12.3 percent. Netherlands’ 2017 HDI of 0.931 is above the average of 0.894 for countries in the very high human development group and above the average of 0.895 for countries in OECD. From OECD, countries which are close to the Netherlands in 2017 HDI rank and to some extent in population size are Belgium and Sweden, which have HDIs ranked 17 and 7 respectively.[13]

Between 1990 and 2017, Netherlands’ life expectancy at birth increased by 5.0 years, mean years of schooling increased by 2.0 years and expected years of schooling increased by 3.3 years. Netherlands’ GNI per capita increased by about 49.8 percent between 1990 and 2017.

3. PROCESS AND PROCEEDINGS: OVERVIEW

3.1. Criminal Procedure

If the police takes someone into custody, the Legal Aid Board (Raad voor Rechtsbijstand) will take care of immediate legal representation to provide legal assistance free of charge. Within 2 hours a ‘piket’ (‘assigned’) solicitor will visit the suspect and help him answer the judicial questions asked by the police. The suspect can also ask for his own lawyer.[1]

When someone commits a crime, the public prosecutor together with the police will start an investigation. The prosecution will take place in de court of the district where the crime has been committed. Depending on de kind of crime, the suspected offender will be prosecuted by one judge (offense, simple cases) or three judges (a full-bench panel in difficult cases like murder, rape, drug trafficking etc.).

When someone is caught red-handed the suspect can be hold into custody for a period of 6 hours when he is suspected of a minor offence. When it concerns a major offence the suspect can be hold into custody for a period of 9 hours. The time between midnight and 09.00 a.m. will not be taken into account for these terms. After this period the suspect will either be released or insured.

When the suspect is still in custody, the public prosecutor can extend the period for 3 days. These 3 days can be extended with another 3 days. When the investigation is not yet ready, the public prosecutor can ask the examining magistrate for another period of 14 days. When the examining magistrate finds it necessary that the suspect stays inside, he will extend the custody for 14 days. The suspect will at least see the examining magistrate after 3 days and 18 hours after his arrest.

The court, consisting of 3 judges, will decide over the extension of the detention for a period of 30 to 90 days. The court will check:

  • Crimes punishable by more than 4 years;
  • If the suspect has a permanent residence;
  • If there are serious objections against the suspect;
  • If there is a hazard of flight;
  • If there is a shocked legal order;
  • Whether the police needs more time to investigate.

The public prosecutor can dispose of minor criminal cases, such as criminal damage, vandalism, shoplifting and traffic violations, by imposing a sanction (strafbeschikking).[2] In this situation the case is not brought before the court. The Public Prosecution Service itself decides on the sanction imposed once it has been established that the suspect is guilty of the offence in question. The sanction could be a fine, a driving ban (for up to six months), an alternative sanction (e.g. up to 180 hours’ community service) or a compensation order. The Public Prosecution Service may not impose a prison sentence; only a court may do that. Suspects who accept the sanction thereby admit their guilt. And if they decide to reject the sanction, they can have their case brought before the court.

One magistrate can impose no more than 1 year imprisonment. When there are 3 magistrates, they can impose life imprisonment. In the Netherlands  life imprisonment means that the sentenced will stay in prison his whole life. After 25 years the sentenced can ask the court if they find it necessary to lock him away for his whole life. He can also place a gratitude request (ex. art. 558 Code of Criminal Procedure of the Netherlands). Life imprisonment is only imposed in a few cases per year.

When a convicted person does not agree with his sentence he can appeal within 14 days. In the Netherlands there are 4 courts of appeal. The case will be completely revisited. The last step is to go to the Supreme Court, also within 14 days. The Supreme Court will only look of the law was respected and to take care of the legalization and the unity of the law in our country.

In the Netherlands when a crime is committed, the police starts an investigation. A victim of a crime can place a declaration about the personal consequences of the crime (f.e. damages) of the crime which was committed against him and can give an opinion on the sentence. When a criminal offense is not prosecuted, the victim can lodge a complaint in writing by the court of appeal (ex. art. 12 Code of Criminal Procedure of the Netherlands). The court of appeal can order the prosecution of the offender.

The offender will be summoned for the trial. The offender will be obliged to be in trial. Sometimes it is possible to have a trial in absentia of the offender (see art. 279-280 Code of Criminal Procedure of the Netherlands).

In the Netherlands the courts, the courts of appeal and the Supreme Court can ask questions to the European Court of Human Rights and all the judges will take the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights into their considerations in the cases they will have to decide.

3.2. Civil Procedure

In the Netherlands we have different procedures which will fall under the terminology Civil Procedure:

1. Civil procedure: This area contains cases between citizens or corporations;
2. Administrative procedure: Cases between citizens and the government (like social welfare, immigration, spatial planning, permits, taxes);
3. Family procedure: Cases like adoption, divorces, division of property.

3.2.1. Civil Procedure

In Civil Procedure the subdistrict court judge deals with rental cases, labour matters and cases under the € 25.000,00. Beside the subdistrict court judge the civil judge can be found in cases between citizens. When a citizen has a conflict with another citizen he can subpoena the other citizen and they will meet in court. The court is the same as in penal procedures, only another chamber. You will start in court, after that you can go to the court of appeal and finally to the Supreme Court.

3.2.2. Administrative procedure

In administrative procedure a litigant can go to the court (another chamber, the administrative chamber) when he has a conflict with the government. When a citizen disagrees with authorities, he has to complain first at the authorities. The authorities have an independent objection committee that speaks with the citizen and a representative of the administrative body and advises the government on the decision that has to be taken. When this complaint-proceeding doesn’t solve the problem, the citizen can go to court. When the citizen or the authorities object to the judgment of the court, they can appeal to:

·         Central Board of Appeal (Centrale Raad van Beroep, social welfare, official – ambtenarenrecht)
·         Central Board of Appeal for trade and industry (College van Beroep voor het bedrijfsleven, economic administrative law, agricultural subsidies, healthcare rates, telecomrates, Fertilizers Act, Forestry Act, disciplinary judge for chartered accountants)
·         Administrative Law Division of the Council of State (Afdeling bestuursrechtspraak van de Raad van State, Environment, spatial planning, environmental permits, grants (subsidies), educational decisions, asylum and residence permits)
·         The Supreme Court (Hoge Raad, penal, civil, taxes)

3.2.3. Family procedure

In family procedures the court can decide that children should need supervision (ondertoezichtstelling) or out-of-home placement (uithuisplaatsing). The judge is advised by the child protection board (Raad voor de Kinderbescherming). The court will also decide in cases of problematic divorces.3.2.4. Summary procedure / Preliminary injunctionWhen a citizen or an authority thinks his case is an urgent matter, he can ask for a summary procedure (kort geding) in civil and family cases. In administrative cases he can ask for a preliminary injunction. These procedures go faster.

3.3. Alternative Dispute Resolution

Alternative dispute resolution, for example in the form of mediation, is on the increase in the Netherlands, however it is still rare in construction-related disputes. Apart from mediation, disputes can also be resolved on the basis of binding advice, in which case the litigants jointly appoint an expert who will deliver a (binding) judgment on the issue at hand. In short, alternative dispute resolution is possible in the Netherlands, albeit that parties do not often avail themselves of this possibility.

3.4. Simplification of law and by-passing legal processes

Online self-help, information and support is offered on the Rechtwijzer website (Roadmap to Justice)[3]. Rechtwijzer is a preliminary provision and offers interactive ‘decision trees’ helping people to assess their situation. In addition, Rechtwijzer provides easy-to-understand information and guidance on possible solutions for the most common legal problems. Rechtwijzer combines publicly run guided pathways for common legal problems with online products and services from private service providers.

4. ACCESS TO JUSTICE, EQUAL ACCESS TO COURT AND FAIR TRIAL

Under the European Convention on Human Rights and the Constitution of the Netherlands, each citizen of the Netherlands has the right to access courts, apply for legal advice and representation and, if means do not suffice, receive state-financed legal aid.[1] The Dutch Legal Aid system provides legal aid to people of limited means. Anyone in need  of professional legal aid but unable to (fully) bear the costs, is entitled to call upon the provisions as set down in the Legal Aid Act (in force since 1994; the last amendment in the regulations took effect on February 1st, 2015). The Legal Aid Act of 1994 replaced the prior statutory system that dealt with the supply of legal aid and dates back as far as 1957.

Residing under the competence of the Ministry of Justice & Security (J&S), an independent governing body called the Legal Aid Board (‘Raad voor Rechtsbijstand’, LAB) is entrusted with all matters concerning administration, availability, organization, supervision and expenditure as well as with the actual implementation of the Legal Aid System.

There is consensus in the Netherlands that access to justice must be guaranteed. However, there are differences of opinion about how far this access should go, how self-reliant people should be expected and to what extent the needs of people are met. The group that suffers the most in this respect is perhaps the group of people who fall just outside the system in terms of income. They earn too much to be able to use legal aid, but too little to be able to pay a regular rate for lawyers although there are many opportunities for legal aid assurance in the market.

It is generally thought that people in the Netherlands have sufficient opportunities to come into contact with first-line or second-line legal aid providers. There is no indication that people cannot find suitable help. There is, however, an ongoing discussion about the reimbursement of legal aid providers. The legal profession and the Minister have different ideas about this.

In November 2015 the Wolfsen Committee submitted a report to the Dutch Minister of Security and Justice entitled ‘Reassessing Legal Aid Towards a Durable System for Legal Aid’. The Wolfsen Committee suggested to organise the system in another way. These proposals focused on strengthening the first-line legal aid, increasing the quality of legal aid, a more bundled and multidisciplinary approach to legal problems, and investigating a possible increase in lawyers’ fees.

In October 2017, the Committee Van der Meer investigated the adequacy of the regulation on lawyers’ fees within the legal aid system. They announced its findings on the basis of a detailed time registration study and came to the conclusion that there is serious backlog in the system, as lawyers in almost all areas of justice and types of cases spend on average much more time than they are reimbursed. In order to be able to bring up to date the current fixed fees, which are based on an approximately twenty-year-old time registration study by the committee Maan, the annual budget for the legal aid system should be increased by approximately € 125 million. However, that outcome did not fall within the precondition of budget neutrality that the Committee had been given. Since then, much has been said about the remuniration of the legal profession within the system. The legal profession is of the opinion that there must first be an increase in the rates before changes are made to the system, while the Minister first wants to implement changes to the system and only wants to increase the rates in the long term if the number of cases decreases after the changes. By way of temporally measurement the hourly rates were raised with 10 % on January the first 2020.

6. COSTS OF RESOLVING DISPUTES WITHIN THE FORMAL JUDICIAL MACHINERY

6.1. Overview of judicial costs for litigants[1]

On average a receiver of legal aid pays € 231 as contribution towards their certificate. Sometimes clients are exempted from individual contributions. This applies to all cases where people have been deprived of their freedom against their will. ‘Have-nots’ are also exempted from paying an individual contribution as well as victims of violent crime and sexual offenses.

6.2. Exemption form judicial costs

A receiver of legal aid can get a reduction on court fees.

6.3. Mechanisms to reduce costs by variations to courts and procedures

Costs can be reduced by using Rechtwijzer (Roadmap to Justice) and by using mediation when possible. Peoples own contribution for a mediation certificate is lower than for a regular certificate. Also one can use Dispute committees for consumer complaints.

In 2018, the disputes committees handled 6,202 complaints and disputes. In total, a solution was offered in 3,650 cases, 1,788 of which were early in the procedure with mediation, mutual solutions and mediation. There are 65 industry dispute commissions.

7. THE PROTECTION OF DIFFUSE AND COLLECTIVE RIGHTS

The Consumers’ Association is pleased that independent interest groups can finally claim collective compensation for groups of victims. The Senate approved March 19 (2019) with a bill that makes this possible.

The new law on the settlement of mass damage in collective action makes it possible for a court to determine in one proceeding whether a company has violated the rules and what is appropriate compensation.

In the old situation, interest groups were allowed to conduct a case on behalf of a group of consumers, but if the court then found that a company was liable, the parties had to go to the table again to reach a settlement. If this did not work, the victims had to litigate individually. That threshold was often too high, as a result of which consumers were estimated to have suffered damages of hundreds of millions of euros annually without being compensated.

11. GLOBAL EFFORTS ON ACCESS TO JUSTICE

We can observe some efforts to analyse and compare justice systems within the European Union. One of the instruments is the “EU Justice Scoreboard”, a comparative information tool that aims to assist the EU and Member States to improve the effectiveness of the national justice systems by providing objective, reliable and comparable data on a number of indicators relevant fort he assessment of the quality, independence and efficiency of justice systems in the Member States. Thefore the Scoreboard uses various sources of information, e.g. data provided by the Council of Europe Commission for the Evaluation of the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ). One of the characterics of a qualitative justice system is the accessibility (2018 EU Justice Scoreboard, p. 23-40)

At the national and international level a lot of civil organisations, e.g. for the poor (GWC’s), for consumers (Test-Aankoop), for migrants and refugees, for tenants, … participate in the debate on access to justice.

Goal 16 focuses on promoting peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels. Goal 16.3 focuses on the equal access tot he legal system for everybody.

On 25 April 2019, the Belgian Parliament adopted a law on the establishment of a National Human Rights Institution (NHRI) in Belgium. With the law, the Belgian government intends to establish a first step for an NHRI in full compliance with the Paris Principles, a call that has been made for many years by national and international actors, including ENNHRI. The intention is to adopt a cooperation agreement which must lead to an interfederal institution. The new institution has been mandated to address the promotion and protection of human rights in Belgium at the federal level, and will have to flesh out its role within a rather complex institutional framework. The law emphasises the importance of a facilitating role of dialogue and cooperation with relevant existing institutions. Through its mandate to promote and protect human rights, the new institution will be able to further create a holistic approach to human rights in Belgium, and to fill gaps in the current promotion and protection framework.

In Belgium, three institutions have specific mandates related to human rights: UNIA is the Interfederal Centre for Equal Opportunities (B-status NHRI), Myria is the Federal Migration Centre (with whom Unia cooperates on the basis of a protocol submitted in the accreditation process), the Combat Poverty, Insecurity and Sociale Exclusion Service.

12. CONCLUSIONS

In The Netherlands the LAB is an independant body. The legal aid system operates according to an open end provision (although the budget is always subjected to political discussion). The system is transparent and there is an emphasis on providing good information, mediation and ADR are supported. There is a growing (good) cooperation between partners in the chain.

A lot of effort is being made to monitor the Legal aid system through an extensive reporting of facts and figures.

At the moment the system receives a lot of political attention, Legal Aid is frequently debated in parliament and senate.

In October 2017, the Committee Van der Meer investigated the adequacy of the regulation on lawyers’ fees within the legal aid system. Their conclusion was that the lawyers’ fees are currently below par. Since then, much has been said about the remuniration of the legal profession within the system. The legal profession is of the opinion that there must first be an increase in the rates before changes are made to the system, while the Minister first wanted to implement measurements leading to a decreases of the number of cases. The latest development is that by way of first temporally measurement the hourly rates were raised already with 10% on January the first 2020, as a reaction to the demands of the Dutch NationaL Bar Association.

Rechtwijzer (Roadmap to Justice) has been developed, an innovative web-based application for citizens.

Legal professionals know quickly whether a certificate is granted or not and get reimbursed swiftly. Extra reimbursement for more time consuming cases is possible on certain conditions.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

[1] Susanne Peters is a researcher at the Dutch Legal Aid Board. She has a PhD in social sciences. In 2004 she finished her thesis on “The social psychology of being better off than others”. For a couple of years she worked at the Research and Documentation Centre (WODC) of the Ministry of Justice. Since 2007 she has been working at the Legal Aid Board, doing research in the field of legal aid and debt restructuring.

[2] https://libguides.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/c.php?g=423114&p=2889158

[3] https://www.government.nl/

[4] https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/#/CBS/nl/

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_the_Netherlands

[6] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_the_Netherlands

[7] https://opendata.cbs.nl/

[8] https://data.worldbank.org/country/netherlands

[9] https://data.oecd.org/netherlands.htm

[10] SCP, 2019

[11] https://nltimes.nl/2018/11/23/fewer-dutch-live-poverty

[12] https://opendata.cbs.nl/statline/#/CBS/nl/

[13] http://hdr.undp.org/en/countries/profiles/NLD

[14] http://hdr.undp.org/sites/all/themes/hdr_theme/country-notes/NLD.pdf

[15] https://libguides.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/c.php?g=423114&p=2889158

[16] https://www.government.nl/topics/administration-of-justice-and-dispute-settlement/the-dutch-court-system

[17] https://www.government.nl/topics/administration-of-justice-and-dispute-settlement/the-dutch-court-system

[18] https://www.rechtspraak.nl/English

[19] For more information on the Administrative Jurisdiction Division, please consult the official website of the Council of State.

[20] More information about the judiciary system in the Netherlands can be found on https://www.rechtspraak.nl/English and on https://www.rechtspraak.nl/SiteCollectionDocuments/The-Judiciary-System-in-the-Netherlands.pdf.

[21] https://e-justice.europa.eu/content_legal_professions-29-nl-en.do?member=1#n03

[22] https://www.advocatenorde.nl/english

[23] http://www.wetrecht.nl/advocaat-verplicht/

[24] The proposed revision of the legal aid system is being developed at this moment (2019/2020). It is still uncertain what form it will take exactly.

[26] https://www.wodc.nl/binaries/dutch-cjs-full-text_tcm28-78160.pdf

[27] Jaarverslag Raad voor de Rechtspraak.

[28] https://fd.nl

[29] https://www.wodc.nl/binaries/dutch-cjs-full-text_tcm28-78160.pdf

[30] Jaarbericht OM

[31] https://www.rechtspraak.nl/SiteCollectionDocuments/If-you-are-suspected-of-a-criminal-offence.pdf

[33] See: www.rechtwijzer.nl

[34] Constitution of the Netherlands Art. 17: ‘No one may be prevented against his will from being heard by the courts to which he is entitled to apply under the law’. Art. 18 ‘(1) everyone may be legally represented in legal and administrative proceedings. (2) Terms concerning the supply of legal aid to persons of limited means shall be laid down by Act of Parliament.’

[36] See: www.rechtwijzer.nl

[37] Both in 2008 and in 2010, the Parliament of the Netherlands have decided to cut the costs of legal aid by € 50 million euros per year in order to prevent them from becoming even higher. In the last couple of years, new ideas for cutbacks have been made and are still being made. At the end of this brochure the plans for cost reduction will be discussed in greater detail.

[39] Information about the possibility to complain is published on internet and is easily found with google, e.g. for Amsterdam https://www.advocatenorde-amsterdam.nl/3225/complaints.html.

[40] First line (free) legal aid is possible for small claims, but a certificate isn’t.

[41] Under certain conditions, applicants of 65 or over are allowed higher maximum assets.

[42] In 2018, more than 10,000 requests to change the reference year were made. This amounts to 2.5% of the total of legal aid certificates granted. This is checked two years after the application.

[43] There are also cases in which the discount is automatically given, for example in criminal cases.

[44] See topic 5.8.2.

[45] https://www.ccbe.eu/NTCdocument/EN_CCBE_CoCpdf1_1382973057.pdf

[46] https://english.wodc.nl/

[47] See: www.rechtwijzer.nl

[48] Geschilbeslechtingsdelta, available at: https://www.wodc.nl/binaries/ob315-summary_tcm28-73371.pdf