The different processes by which state judges are selected is an increasingly popular topic for discussion amongst legal scholars and practitioners. While many law review articles and discussions advocate for one method of judicial selection over the other, this article addresses one specific and significant concern with the elective method: campaign financing.2 As this article explains, campaign financing can impair judicial independence and inhibit fair and impartial decisions. Fortunately, the appointive system is insulated from the pressures and problems associated with campaign financing, a benefit which is all the more evident today when everyone, including judges, face difficult economic times. More importantly, however, because a...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
The conventional wisdom among many legal scholars is that judicial independence can best be achieved...
In this article, Martin Belsky makes the case for judicial selection based on merit, as opposed to p...
The selection of state court judges in the United States has been the subject of vigorous debate. Th...
In recent years, judicial elections have undergone a transformation: races once characterized by low...
Recent discussions of judicial election campaigns have been marked by two themes: (i) the growing co...
Twenty-one states elect appellate judges, while the others use gubernatorial appointment, legislativ...
This paper explores the impact that systems of judicial elections have on judges’ decision making. I...
This thesis examines campaign contributions in judicial elections. Increasing campaign costs have cr...
This article proceeds in four stages. Part I examines the major rulings, relating to tort reform and...
Twenty-one states elect appellate judges, while the others use gubernatorial appointment, legislativ...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
The conventional wisdom among many legal scholars is that judicial independence can best be achieved...
In this article, Martin Belsky makes the case for judicial selection based on merit, as opposed to p...
The selection of state court judges in the United States has been the subject of vigorous debate. Th...
In recent years, judicial elections have undergone a transformation: races once characterized by low...
Recent discussions of judicial election campaigns have been marked by two themes: (i) the growing co...
Twenty-one states elect appellate judges, while the others use gubernatorial appointment, legislativ...
This paper explores the impact that systems of judicial elections have on judges’ decision making. I...
This thesis examines campaign contributions in judicial elections. Increasing campaign costs have cr...
This article proceeds in four stages. Part I examines the major rulings, relating to tort reform and...
Twenty-one states elect appellate judges, while the others use gubernatorial appointment, legislativ...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
The thesis offered here is that the cost of judicial campaigns has reached a level where both candid...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
The conventional wisdom among many legal scholars is that judicial independence can best be achieved...
In this article, Martin Belsky makes the case for judicial selection based on merit, as opposed to p...