Here is a book for which we judges have been waiting, but it is one that should be required reading for others, both within and without the profession. It comes at a time when much public attention and criticism have been directed toward the courts, the news media have given wide coverage to pending and decided cases, and an extraordinary number of federal judges have resigned their offices for more lucrative endeavors
The Editorial Board and Staff of Volume 43 of the Maine Law Review enthusiastically dedicate this is...
In a recent article, I addressed one aspect of the complex of issues facing federal judges--the prob...
The Authors of this Article are engaged in a separate project to publish the full collection of law-...
Here is a book for which we judges have been waiting, but it is one that should be required reading ...
What do you do when your judicial hero, the author of two important books on appellate judging, was ...
Judge Coffin, a former Chief Justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, a ...
Becoming Judge Coffin\u27s law clerk must be the most fortunate of conclusions to a legal education....
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
The Editorial Board and Staff of Volume 43 of the Maine Law Review enthusiastically dedicate this is...
In December 1980, when I became a First Circuit judge, the United States Court of Appeals was compos...
If judges are to be judged, they would doubtless prefer to be judged by judges, whose critical judgm...
Ten years ago, and shortly before I took my seat beside my brothers of the United States Court of Ap...
These reminiscences focus on the eleven years, from 1972 to 1983, that Frank M. Coffin of Maine was ...
In his memoir, Life and Times in the Three Branches, Judge Coffin recounts the history of the instit...
With more than 30,000 judges in the United States alone, you’d expect to find an impressive array of...
The Editorial Board and Staff of Volume 43 of the Maine Law Review enthusiastically dedicate this is...
In a recent article, I addressed one aspect of the complex of issues facing federal judges--the prob...
The Authors of this Article are engaged in a separate project to publish the full collection of law-...
Here is a book for which we judges have been waiting, but it is one that should be required reading ...
What do you do when your judicial hero, the author of two important books on appellate judging, was ...
Judge Coffin, a former Chief Justice of the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, a ...
Becoming Judge Coffin\u27s law clerk must be the most fortunate of conclusions to a legal education....
Eighty years ago, Judge Benjamin N. Cardozo discussed the “nature of the judicial process” in a seri...
The Editorial Board and Staff of Volume 43 of the Maine Law Review enthusiastically dedicate this is...
In December 1980, when I became a First Circuit judge, the United States Court of Appeals was compos...
If judges are to be judged, they would doubtless prefer to be judged by judges, whose critical judgm...
Ten years ago, and shortly before I took my seat beside my brothers of the United States Court of Ap...
These reminiscences focus on the eleven years, from 1972 to 1983, that Frank M. Coffin of Maine was ...
In his memoir, Life and Times in the Three Branches, Judge Coffin recounts the history of the instit...
With more than 30,000 judges in the United States alone, you’d expect to find an impressive array of...
The Editorial Board and Staff of Volume 43 of the Maine Law Review enthusiastically dedicate this is...
In a recent article, I addressed one aspect of the complex of issues facing federal judges--the prob...
The Authors of this Article are engaged in a separate project to publish the full collection of law-...