Producing well-written reasoned judgments (a term that is used herein to denote both trial court decisions and appellate opinions) is the goal of all members of the bench. Badly written rulings can have significant legal consequences for both the parties, who may incur costs as a result of a need to appeal a poorly worded decision or opinion, and society as a whole, since a poorly drafted precedent may drive the law in an unanticipated and unfortunate direction or lead to increased litigation as individuals attempt to define the parameters of an ambiguous new ruling. As a result, helping judges write decisions and opinions that are coherent and clear would appear fundamentally important to the proper administration of justice
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
The question the papers in this Special Issue address is whether it matters how judicial opinions ar...
Producing well-written reasoned judgments (a term that is used herein to denote both trial court dec...
Not all appellate judges make the drafting of tentative opinions a part of their law clerks\u27 duti...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
The privilege of being a federal circuit judge allows, and indeed obliges, a judge to bring scrutiny...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
I have been a federal court of appeals judge for thirty years, and naturally over this long span of ...
In this action, Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus compelling the offending judges to write better...
Judges\u27 decisions must rank among the most documented types of decisionmaking. At the appellate l...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
Empirical legal scholars have traditionally modeled trial court judicial opinion writing by assuming...
For some number of years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of unpublished, or ...
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
The question the papers in this Special Issue address is whether it matters how judicial opinions ar...
Producing well-written reasoned judgments (a term that is used herein to denote both trial court dec...
Not all appellate judges make the drafting of tentative opinions a part of their law clerks\u27 duti...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
The privilege of being a federal circuit judge allows, and indeed obliges, a judge to bring scrutiny...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
I have been a federal court of appeals judge for thirty years, and naturally over this long span of ...
In this action, Plaintiffs sought a writ of mandamus compelling the offending judges to write better...
Judges\u27 decisions must rank among the most documented types of decisionmaking. At the appellate l...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
Empirical legal scholars have traditionally modeled trial court judicial opinion writing by assuming...
For some number of years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of unpublished, or ...
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
For many years, judges and academics have debated the pros and cons of non-precedential judicial opi...
The question the papers in this Special Issue address is whether it matters how judicial opinions ar...