New York\u27s system of electing lower court judges has long been notorious for providing the appearance of democracy without any of the substance. Although the people are given an opportunity to vote for judges, the really meaningful choices about who will run, where, and whether judicial elections will even be contested have for years been made by party insiders. Last year, in a case soon to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court, the Second Circuit invalidated New York\u27s method of electing judges on the ground that it violates the associational rights of party rank and file. In this brief essay, I argue that the Second Circuit misanalyzed the problems plaguing New York\u27s judicial selection process. New York\u27s method for choosing jud...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Reporthttps://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/feerick_integrity_commission_reports/1002/thumbnail.jp
New York\u27s system of electing lower court judges has long been notorious for providing the appear...
The practice of selecting judges by popular election, commonplace among the American states, has rec...
This Article contains two parts. First, it sets forth the context of the symposium, including reflec...
On February 27, 1974 Chief Judge Charles D. Breitel of the New York State Court of Appeals addressed...
This Article examines the process of judicial selection in New York State in light of the recent cou...
Transcript of the keynote address delivered at Fordham University School of law on April 7, 2006. T...
This Note proposes legislation that would cure many deficiencies in the present system of judicial ...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
American states have experimented with different methods of judicial selection for two centuries, cr...
This Essay critiques the arguments leveled at judicial elections. For each criticism--which I have d...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Reporthttps://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/feerick_integrity_commission_reports/1002/thumbnail.jp
New York\u27s system of electing lower court judges has long been notorious for providing the appear...
The practice of selecting judges by popular election, commonplace among the American states, has rec...
This Article contains two parts. First, it sets forth the context of the symposium, including reflec...
On February 27, 1974 Chief Judge Charles D. Breitel of the New York State Court of Appeals addressed...
This Article examines the process of judicial selection in New York State in light of the recent cou...
Transcript of the keynote address delivered at Fordham University School of law on April 7, 2006. T...
This Note proposes legislation that would cure many deficiencies in the present system of judicial ...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
American states have experimented with different methods of judicial selection for two centuries, cr...
This Essay critiques the arguments leveled at judicial elections. For each criticism--which I have d...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Reporthttps://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/feerick_integrity_commission_reports/1002/thumbnail.jp