In the Spring 2008 issue of the Tennessee Law Review, I wrote an essay questioning whether Tennessee\u27s merit system for selecting appellate judges - the Tennessee Plan - satisfies the requirements of the Tennessee Constitution. The Tennessee Constitution requires all judges to be elected by the qualified voters of the state, yet, under the Plan, all appellate judges are initially selected by gubernatorial appointment and then retained in uncontested referenda. I argued that both the appointment and retention features of the Plan are unconstitutional, and I recommended that the legislature refuse to reauthorize the Plan when it expires in June of 2009. Two very distinguished authors, Penny White, a former Tennessee Supreme Court Justice, ...
The Supreme Court of Tennessee has been faced with few major Constitutional Law problems during the ...
[Excerpt] Because I teach constitutional law, a friend recently asked me whether Judge Merrick Garl...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection in use in many states t...
In the Spring 2008 issue of the Tennessee Law Review, I wrote an essay questioning whether Tennessee...
Tennessee\u27s merit system for selecting judges - referred to as the Tennessee Plan - has been cont...
This article includes an overview of judicial selection in Tennessee, as well as providing the autho...
Judicial selection for state courts in the United States has become a controversial subject in Ameri...
This article argues that popularly electing judges is incompatible with the three basic elements of ...
My major difficulty with Professor Van Alstyne\u27s paper is its incomplete character. In the end, h...
The existence of judicial review confronts scholars of political institutions, particularly scholars...
In this essay, Professor Tobias responds to Professors Gerhardt and Painter, praising their work and...
Introduction: On November 4, 2014, the Judicial Selection Amendment (Amendment II) to the Tennessee ...
Surveys have shown that as America\u27s distrust of the political system increases, so does its unfa...
In the November 2000 election, the citizens of Florida had the opportunity to switch from the nonpar...
This article is written in the hope that it will be helpful to members of the Nebraska Bar in famili...
The Supreme Court of Tennessee has been faced with few major Constitutional Law problems during the ...
[Excerpt] Because I teach constitutional law, a friend recently asked me whether Judge Merrick Garl...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection in use in many states t...
In the Spring 2008 issue of the Tennessee Law Review, I wrote an essay questioning whether Tennessee...
Tennessee\u27s merit system for selecting judges - referred to as the Tennessee Plan - has been cont...
This article includes an overview of judicial selection in Tennessee, as well as providing the autho...
Judicial selection for state courts in the United States has become a controversial subject in Ameri...
This article argues that popularly electing judges is incompatible with the three basic elements of ...
My major difficulty with Professor Van Alstyne\u27s paper is its incomplete character. In the end, h...
The existence of judicial review confronts scholars of political institutions, particularly scholars...
In this essay, Professor Tobias responds to Professors Gerhardt and Painter, praising their work and...
Introduction: On November 4, 2014, the Judicial Selection Amendment (Amendment II) to the Tennessee ...
Surveys have shown that as America\u27s distrust of the political system increases, so does its unfa...
In the November 2000 election, the citizens of Florida had the opportunity to switch from the nonpar...
This article is written in the hope that it will be helpful to members of the Nebraska Bar in famili...
The Supreme Court of Tennessee has been faced with few major Constitutional Law problems during the ...
[Excerpt] Because I teach constitutional law, a friend recently asked me whether Judge Merrick Garl...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection in use in many states t...