For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While the explicitly-framed tension has been about the relative importance of judicial independence and judicial accountability in a democracy, the underlying issue has been about which structure better promotes the legitimacy of the judiciary. An institution has legitimacy when it enjoys diffuse support even for controversial decisions. Judicial legitimacy is in inherent tension with a judiciary in a democracy, since democracy implicitly assumes political elements to selection of all leaders (including judges), while judicial legitimacy is undermined by politics. The contemporary work on the relationship between judicial selection methods and legit...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as merit selecti...
A core insight of the legal realists was that many disputes are indeterminate. For example, in many ...
For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While t...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Traditional democratic political theorists promote the idea that Supreme Court exercises of judicial...
It is hardly novel to suggest that judicial elections, including retention elections, illustrate pro...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
This Article reviews some of the factors that have diminished the appeal of merit selection for judg...
A generation ago, the pressing question in constitutional law was the countermajoritarian difficulty...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
Judges are expected to satisfy two conflicting ideals. First, they are to follow the law without fea...
In recent years, many commentators have called for the depoliticization of the judicial appointmen...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as merit selecti...
A core insight of the legal realists was that many disputes are indeterminate. For example, in many ...
For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While t...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Traditional democratic political theorists promote the idea that Supreme Court exercises of judicial...
It is hardly novel to suggest that judicial elections, including retention elections, illustrate pro...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
This Article reviews some of the factors that have diminished the appeal of merit selection for judg...
A generation ago, the pressing question in constitutional law was the countermajoritarian difficulty...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
Judges are expected to satisfy two conflicting ideals. First, they are to follow the law without fea...
In recent years, many commentators have called for the depoliticization of the judicial appointmen...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as merit selecti...
A core insight of the legal realists was that many disputes are indeterminate. For example, in many ...