Legal commentators have proposed a variety of solutions to the perceived problems of the U.S. courts of appeals, from splitting large circuits to assuring partisan balance in panel decisions. They have always assumed, however, that judges a particular appellate court should have sole responsibility for creating the law of that circuit, except when caseload pressures make it necessary to borrow visiting judges. In this Essay, Professor Abramowicz proposes using visiting judges in a more important role: en banc decision-making. Under this proposal, en banc decisions for one circuit would be made entirely by courts of appeals judges randomly selected from other circuits. In addition to increasing the likelihood that any given decision is more ...
This article considers systematically whether the Supreme Court is more likely to review an en banc ...
Specialized judicial education would help supreme court justices and appellate judges of state judic...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
Legal commentators have proposed a variety of solutions to the perceived problems of the U.S. courts...
The ability of U.S. Courts of Appeals to control the development of law within their respective circ...
The U.S. Courts of Appeals, working principally through three-judge panels, constitute important fin...
As the decisions of the United States Courts of Appeals become an increasingly important part of Ame...
This Note will examine the validity of the traditional justifications for en bane review, discuss th...
Every circuit has the ability to review cases en banc. Hearing cases en banc allows the full circuit...
Elitism, Expediency, and the New Certiorari: Requiem for the Learned Hand Tradition is a thought-pro...
The federal courts of appeals embrace the ideal that judges are committed to rule-of-law norms, coll...
Appellate review can be understood as an opportunity to correct errors made by lower courts and, by ...
In the US Court of Appeals, a panel of judges can vote to rehear a case which had previously been he...
This paper adds to the existing literature on en banc rehearings in two ways. First, I incorporate t...
As judges of the geographically largest and busiest federal circuit court of appeals, the 26 active ...
This article considers systematically whether the Supreme Court is more likely to review an en banc ...
Specialized judicial education would help supreme court justices and appellate judges of state judic...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
Legal commentators have proposed a variety of solutions to the perceived problems of the U.S. courts...
The ability of U.S. Courts of Appeals to control the development of law within their respective circ...
The U.S. Courts of Appeals, working principally through three-judge panels, constitute important fin...
As the decisions of the United States Courts of Appeals become an increasingly important part of Ame...
This Note will examine the validity of the traditional justifications for en bane review, discuss th...
Every circuit has the ability to review cases en banc. Hearing cases en banc allows the full circuit...
Elitism, Expediency, and the New Certiorari: Requiem for the Learned Hand Tradition is a thought-pro...
The federal courts of appeals embrace the ideal that judges are committed to rule-of-law norms, coll...
Appellate review can be understood as an opportunity to correct errors made by lower courts and, by ...
In the US Court of Appeals, a panel of judges can vote to rehear a case which had previously been he...
This paper adds to the existing literature on en banc rehearings in two ways. First, I incorporate t...
As judges of the geographically largest and busiest federal circuit court of appeals, the 26 active ...
This article considers systematically whether the Supreme Court is more likely to review an en banc ...
Specialized judicial education would help supreme court justices and appellate judges of state judic...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...