Participants in and critics of the judiciary agree that unless some solution to the problem of clogged court calendars is found, our system of justice will grind to a standstill. Against this backdrop, the panel members explored methods of expediting case flow through the federal system so that litigants are assured a just and speedy resolution of their disputes whether through settlement, arbitration, or trial
If justice delayed is justice denied, justice is often denied in American courts. Delay in the co...
The first panel discussion at the National Forum on Judicial Independence reviews the budget pressur...
Professors Molot, Fuller, Fiss, and Resnik, among others, have expressed concerns about the unbounde...
The Constitutional Law Panel of the NAWJ brought together distinguished theoreticians and practition...
Federal appellate judges no longer have the time to hear argument and draft opinions in all of their...
The third panel discussion at the National Forum on Judicial Independence explores the tension betwe...
For thirty years, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have relied on active Judicial case managemen...
The prevalence of divorce and domestic violence brings Americans before family courts in unprecedent...
Although portions of the United States economy have begun to recover from the economic crisis that t...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Washington State UniversityThe court...
The 2015 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure ambitiously sought to reduce pretrial de...
This essay reflects on the ways in which procedural fairness can provide the direction for a revived...
The problems of cost and delay experienced by parties seeking civil justice have been the subject of...
Federal appellate courts have significant discretion to set the internal policies that govern the ap...
This article discusses how the U.S. court system can function optimally given declining trial rates ...
If justice delayed is justice denied, justice is often denied in American courts. Delay in the co...
The first panel discussion at the National Forum on Judicial Independence reviews the budget pressur...
Professors Molot, Fuller, Fiss, and Resnik, among others, have expressed concerns about the unbounde...
The Constitutional Law Panel of the NAWJ brought together distinguished theoreticians and practition...
Federal appellate judges no longer have the time to hear argument and draft opinions in all of their...
The third panel discussion at the National Forum on Judicial Independence explores the tension betwe...
For thirty years, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure have relied on active Judicial case managemen...
The prevalence of divorce and domestic violence brings Americans before family courts in unprecedent...
Although portions of the United States economy have begun to recover from the economic crisis that t...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Washington State UniversityThe court...
The 2015 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure ambitiously sought to reduce pretrial de...
This essay reflects on the ways in which procedural fairness can provide the direction for a revived...
The problems of cost and delay experienced by parties seeking civil justice have been the subject of...
Federal appellate courts have significant discretion to set the internal policies that govern the ap...
This article discusses how the U.S. court system can function optimally given declining trial rates ...
If justice delayed is justice denied, justice is often denied in American courts. Delay in the co...
The first panel discussion at the National Forum on Judicial Independence reviews the budget pressur...
Professors Molot, Fuller, Fiss, and Resnik, among others, have expressed concerns about the unbounde...