The Supreme Court of North Carolina is an anomaly among state courts in the antebellum years. In a period dominated by democratic reforms of state government, the court did not merely survive unscathed it actually increased its independence. The remarkable success of this court is largely attributable to the personal reputations and political acumen of two of its judges, Thomas Ruffin and William Gaston. Without those two men it is likely that the Supreme Court would have been abolished in a wave of democratic reforms that peaked in North Carolina with the constitutional amendments of 1835
From 1889-1924 Walter Clark served on the North Carolina Supreme Court. Clark, the son of a wealthy ...
The Georgia appellate courts face challenges common to many courts in these days of reduced governme...
There is a tendency among present and former law students to think that the development of the natur...
The Supreme Court of North Carolina is an anomaly among state courts in the antebellum years. In a p...
In recent years, the problem of selecting judges to sit on the highest state courts has become a nat...
In the years preceding the Civil War, two North Carolina Supreme Court Justices, Chief Justice Thoma...
In 1788, delegates assembled in North Carolina to decide whether to ratify the Constitution. A debat...
History reveals that for more than three centuries after the Lord Proprietors of the Carolina territ...
This Article covers the critical issue of judicial independence. The ABA\u27s Commission on Separati...
Although landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade have great...
The concept of judicial independence has become the sine qua non of the judicial craft. This dissert...
Professor Currie\u27s article [See David P. Currie, Separating Judicial Power , 61 LAW & CONTEMPOR...
Differences about how the business of federal circuit and district courts should be administered--as...
This Article looks at the role of judicial independence in the United States. The author examines th...
This Note will attempt to provide the framework for a more extended institutional examination of the...
From 1889-1924 Walter Clark served on the North Carolina Supreme Court. Clark, the son of a wealthy ...
The Georgia appellate courts face challenges common to many courts in these days of reduced governme...
There is a tendency among present and former law students to think that the development of the natur...
The Supreme Court of North Carolina is an anomaly among state courts in the antebellum years. In a p...
In recent years, the problem of selecting judges to sit on the highest state courts has become a nat...
In the years preceding the Civil War, two North Carolina Supreme Court Justices, Chief Justice Thoma...
In 1788, delegates assembled in North Carolina to decide whether to ratify the Constitution. A debat...
History reveals that for more than three centuries after the Lord Proprietors of the Carolina territ...
This Article covers the critical issue of judicial independence. The ABA\u27s Commission on Separati...
Although landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade have great...
The concept of judicial independence has become the sine qua non of the judicial craft. This dissert...
Professor Currie\u27s article [See David P. Currie, Separating Judicial Power , 61 LAW & CONTEMPOR...
Differences about how the business of federal circuit and district courts should be administered--as...
This Article looks at the role of judicial independence in the United States. The author examines th...
This Note will attempt to provide the framework for a more extended institutional examination of the...
From 1889-1924 Walter Clark served on the North Carolina Supreme Court. Clark, the son of a wealthy ...
The Georgia appellate courts face challenges common to many courts in these days of reduced governme...
There is a tendency among present and former law students to think that the development of the natur...