Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disobedience. From the philosophical as well as theoretical point of view, the most intriguing would be an instance of judicial disobedience when applied to a state of democracy and the rule of law. In order to (re-)construct such an instance, the article traces the reader back to the middle of the 19th Century, when the moral conscience of (at least) some of American judges drove them to searching for the sound justification of judicial disobedience when faced with problem of slavery.32709617Filozofia Publiczna i Edukacja Demokratyczn
The term ―judicial activism has become a common part of modern American political speech, though it ...
This article discusses the notion that a judge’s obligation to obey precedent should, if circumstanc...
Jurists are trained to value the rule of law and judges are expected to uphold same whatever the cir...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disob...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disobe...
The results most relevant to the concerns of this Article are of course the effects upon how we judg...
The intellectual world of the nineteenth century judge was one in which the two main concerns releva...
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
In his great book, Justice Accused, Robert Cover wrote of anti-slavery judges whose adherence to a f...
It is conventionally believed that neutral legal principles required antislavery judges to uphold pr...
Why do the people and institutions of democratic states, and in particular those of the United State...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
In this paper, we argue that the myth of the detached, rational judge, free from emotion runs the ri...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
The term ―judicial activism has become a common part of modern American political speech, though it ...
This article discusses the notion that a judge’s obligation to obey precedent should, if circumstanc...
Jurists are trained to value the rule of law and judges are expected to uphold same whatever the cir...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disob...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disobe...
The results most relevant to the concerns of this Article are of course the effects upon how we judg...
The intellectual world of the nineteenth century judge was one in which the two main concerns releva...
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
In his great book, Justice Accused, Robert Cover wrote of anti-slavery judges whose adherence to a f...
It is conventionally believed that neutral legal principles required antislavery judges to uphold pr...
Why do the people and institutions of democratic states, and in particular those of the United State...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
In this paper, we argue that the myth of the detached, rational judge, free from emotion runs the ri...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
The term ―judicial activism has become a common part of modern American political speech, though it ...
This article discusses the notion that a judge’s obligation to obey precedent should, if circumstanc...
Jurists are trained to value the rule of law and judges are expected to uphold same whatever the cir...