Judges currently face a daunting task. On the one hand, they are increasingly aware of the indeterminacy of the law, while on the other hand, they face an explosion of fact. Judges are floating on shaky legal timbers in a sea of documents, deposition transcripts, affidavits, oral courtroom testimony, and expert opinions. The explosion of fact alone presents monumental problems for deciding cases without unduly simplifying or reducing this factual complexity. For example, both federal and state judges are implementing case management systems to deal with their crushing case loads and the increasing complexity of their cases. In addition, there appears to be an overwhelming consensus that the law is indeterminate, but there is little consensu...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
It might be supposed that justiciability, the very foundation of the judicial function, would be a m...
Judges are not required to be bumps on a log in their own courtrooms, just spectators as proceedings...
Judges currently face a daunting task. On the one hand, they are increasingly aware of the indetermi...
If, as a result of taking Indeterminacy seriously, we revolutionize the way we teach law and the way...
How do judges judge? Do they apply law to facts in a mechanical and deliberative way, as the formali...
Beginning with the focus of Legal Realism on the importance of the judge\u27s hunch, judicial disc...
Deconstruction has already happened on the Supreme Court. Not only can no member of the Court reall...
Speak to enough lawyers (especially litigators) about their experiences grappling with binding appel...
American proponents of legal formalism, such as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, worry (quite r...
How should judges decide the cases presented to them? In our system the answer is, “according to law...
In the realm of American jurisprudence, little draws more excitement or controversy than investigati...
Ostensibly, we are all Legal Realists now. No longer do legal theorists maintain that judicial decis...
How should judges decide the cases presented to them? In our system the answer is, “according to law...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The "balanced realist" view that judging inevit...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
It might be supposed that justiciability, the very foundation of the judicial function, would be a m...
Judges are not required to be bumps on a log in their own courtrooms, just spectators as proceedings...
Judges currently face a daunting task. On the one hand, they are increasingly aware of the indetermi...
If, as a result of taking Indeterminacy seriously, we revolutionize the way we teach law and the way...
How do judges judge? Do they apply law to facts in a mechanical and deliberative way, as the formali...
Beginning with the focus of Legal Realism on the importance of the judge\u27s hunch, judicial disc...
Deconstruction has already happened on the Supreme Court. Not only can no member of the Court reall...
Speak to enough lawyers (especially litigators) about their experiences grappling with binding appel...
American proponents of legal formalism, such as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, worry (quite r...
How should judges decide the cases presented to them? In our system the answer is, “according to law...
In the realm of American jurisprudence, little draws more excitement or controversy than investigati...
Ostensibly, we are all Legal Realists now. No longer do legal theorists maintain that judicial decis...
How should judges decide the cases presented to them? In our system the answer is, “according to law...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.The "balanced realist" view that judging inevit...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
It might be supposed that justiciability, the very foundation of the judicial function, would be a m...
Judges are not required to be bumps on a log in their own courtrooms, just spectators as proceedings...