In "An Empirical Ranking of Judicial Performance" (S. Cal. L. Rev. (2004)), Professors Steven Choi and Mitu Gulati are ambitious: They seek to quantify great legal minds. This interesting endeavor has both descriptive and normative components: Choi and Gulati hope not only to offer objective measures of what makes a judge great but also to impact the choices that presidents and senators make when appointing individuals to the U.S. Supreme Court. Their procedures---which entail running the names of judges through various judicial tournaments---lead the authors to advocate a handful of well-known federal appellate judges for nomination to the high court. Although Professors Choi and Gulati have unequivocally started a useful dialogue, we ...
What is to be gained by using empirical evidence to rank or judge judges? Such empirical studies c...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
article published in law reviewInspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cl...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cla...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the feasibility and desirability of measuring th...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the feasibility and desireability of measuring t...
The impetus for the Article was frustration with the current judicial appointments process. Both sid...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
In this invited response to Stephen Choi & Mitu Gulati, Choosing the Next Supreme Court Justice: An...
How ought we to select judges? One possibility is that each of us should campaign for the selection ...
Judges and courts get evaluated and ranked in a variety of contexts. The President implicitly ranks ...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
For at least three decades now, those charged with nominating and confirming justices to the U.S. Su...
In light of concerns that politics, philosophy, and ideology now dominate the federal judicial appoi...
What is to be gained by using empirical evidence to rank or judge judges? Such empirical studies c...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
article published in law reviewInspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cl...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cla...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the feasibility and desirability of measuring th...
This article contributes to an ongoing debate about the feasibility and desireability of measuring t...
The impetus for the Article was frustration with the current judicial appointments process. Both sid...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
In this invited response to Stephen Choi & Mitu Gulati, Choosing the Next Supreme Court Justice: An...
How ought we to select judges? One possibility is that each of us should campaign for the selection ...
Judges and courts get evaluated and ranked in a variety of contexts. The President implicitly ranks ...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
For at least three decades now, those charged with nominating and confirming justices to the U.S. Su...
In light of concerns that politics, philosophy, and ideology now dominate the federal judicial appoi...
What is to be gained by using empirical evidence to rank or judge judges? Such empirical studies c...
This Article presents an empirical performance ranking of 383 federal appellate judges who served on...
article published in law reviewInspired by the burgeoning empirical literature on the judiciary, the...