The rule of law depends on highly talented, independent judges who conscientiously strive to ensure that the law is consistently applied in a principled and predictable manner This Essay addresses two potential threats to judicial independence and the rule of law that we believe warrant special attention at this time. First, inadequate judicial salaries pose a threat to the quality and independence of the judiciary. Judges\u27 real pay has declined substantially over the past generation, even as the compensation of other callings within the legal profession has risen dramatically. This growing disparity in pay has prompted an increasing number of experienced judges to leave the bench and has discouraged many of our most talented and experie...
Is the federal judiciary truly an independent body? A quick glance at the Constitution would suggest...
In this study I provide an empirical analysis of the judicial system. The main emphasis of this stud...
This Article answers this question with the following jurisprudential hypothesis: many legal outcome...
The rule of law depends on highly talented, independent judges who conscientiously strive to ensure ...
The rule of law depends on highly talented, independent judges who conscientiously strive to ensure ...
Alexander Hamilton referred to the judiciary as “the least dangerous branch” because it could neithe...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
This foreword gives a brief background on the panel discussion to ensue, which illustrates the dilem...
This issue of the Mercer Law Review was stimulated in part by a concern expressed by some federal ju...
First, the Essay considers certain obstacles to research concerning judicial education as a means of...
The rule of law paradigm has long operated on the premise that independent judges disregard extraleg...
The question of judicial accountability and independence arises primarily in the context of state co...
In this paper I argue that the main cause of the poisonous state of interbranch relations involving ...
In recent years, a steady chorus of dignitaries has decried the low pay of federal judges and sugg...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, 2006.Includes bibliograp...
Is the federal judiciary truly an independent body? A quick glance at the Constitution would suggest...
In this study I provide an empirical analysis of the judicial system. The main emphasis of this stud...
This Article answers this question with the following jurisprudential hypothesis: many legal outcome...
The rule of law depends on highly talented, independent judges who conscientiously strive to ensure ...
The rule of law depends on highly talented, independent judges who conscientiously strive to ensure ...
Alexander Hamilton referred to the judiciary as “the least dangerous branch” because it could neithe...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
This foreword gives a brief background on the panel discussion to ensue, which illustrates the dilem...
This issue of the Mercer Law Review was stimulated in part by a concern expressed by some federal ju...
First, the Essay considers certain obstacles to research concerning judicial education as a means of...
The rule of law paradigm has long operated on the premise that independent judges disregard extraleg...
The question of judicial accountability and independence arises primarily in the context of state co...
In this paper I argue that the main cause of the poisonous state of interbranch relations involving ...
In recent years, a steady chorus of dignitaries has decried the low pay of federal judges and sugg...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Economics, 2006.Includes bibliograp...
Is the federal judiciary truly an independent body? A quick glance at the Constitution would suggest...
In this study I provide an empirical analysis of the judicial system. The main emphasis of this stud...
This Article answers this question with the following jurisprudential hypothesis: many legal outcome...