The State of Utah has recently introduced several innovations to its judicial performance evaluation program. Since the 1960s, such programs have been used in a growing number of states to inform decisions about judicial retention and to provide feedback to judges about their performance. The evaluations have traditionally been limited to surveys completed by a variety of stakeholders in the court system. But several states have begun to expand the scope of their evaluation programs beyond surveys, and one of these innovations is to observe judges in their courtrooms. Utah has developed its courtroom-observation program to become a major component of its overall judicial performance evaluation. This article describes the history of judicial...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
The State of Utah has recently introduced several innovations to its judicial performance evaluation...
Official judicial-performance evaluation (JPE) programs in the United States emerged to achieve impo...
This Article discusses judicial performance evaluations as a check on judicial independence. It cove...
<p>Studies of the courts, conducted primarily in the United States, suggest that the way legal profe...
Symposium: Seventh Annual Conference of the National Association of Women Judges: Conference Present...
Judicial Performance Evaluation (JPE) is generally seen as an important part of the merit system, wh...
<p>Judicial performance evaluations are a relatively new tool for assessing judges and providing inf...
Perceptions of judges ought to be based on their performance. Yet, few studies of the relation betwe...
The quality of our judicial system, like other institutions, is a function of the work performed by ...
ARTICLES 124 Who Are You Going to Believe?. 132 Utilization of Rules 614 and 706 in Fact-Finding: A ...
Inspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the editors of the Florida State U...
The American Judges Association (AJA) conducted interviews about procedural fairness with nine natio...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
The State of Utah has recently introduced several innovations to its judicial performance evaluation...
Official judicial-performance evaluation (JPE) programs in the United States emerged to achieve impo...
This Article discusses judicial performance evaluations as a check on judicial independence. It cove...
<p>Studies of the courts, conducted primarily in the United States, suggest that the way legal profe...
Symposium: Seventh Annual Conference of the National Association of Women Judges: Conference Present...
Judicial Performance Evaluation (JPE) is generally seen as an important part of the merit system, wh...
<p>Judicial performance evaluations are a relatively new tool for assessing judges and providing inf...
Perceptions of judges ought to be based on their performance. Yet, few studies of the relation betwe...
The quality of our judicial system, like other institutions, is a function of the work performed by ...
ARTICLES 124 Who Are You Going to Believe?. 132 Utilization of Rules 614 and 706 in Fact-Finding: A ...
Inspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the editors of the Florida State U...
The American Judges Association (AJA) conducted interviews about procedural fairness with nine natio...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...