Readers of court judgments will have observed that in the course of expressing reasons for the decisions they reach, judges commonly refer to books and articles written by academics. This is not surprising. Many scholarly publications contain information, arguments and opinions pertinent to the choices that judges must make, and lawyers commonly refer to such works in the written and oral arguments they present to courts. We would therefore expect the judges who must assess and respond to such arguments to make mention of that scholarly material. Moreover a certain portion of academic writing-in particular, a preponderance of law review articles-is written as more or less direct exhortation tojudges about how to decide cases expected to com...
The Supreme Court of Canada has developed a practice of releasing some of the most important constit...
Legal citation is based primarily upon the writing habits of a particular profession - lawyers. In a...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
Readers of court judgments will have observed that in the course of expressing reasons for the decis...
Scholars have long paid attention to how often and for what reasons Supreme Court justices cite law ...
Judges do not simply declare outcomes but also give reasons; in Canada, these reasons are typically ...
Martha Woodmansee has pointed out that the law has yet to be affected by the critique of authorshi...
In this paper, we spin the question “Will Women Judges Really Make a Difference?” in another directi...
Applicants to the federal judiciary identify three main audiences for their decisions: the involved ...
Before exploring the reasonable limits of judicial free speech, it is important to understand the ro...
Is there a disconnect between the priorities that make cases important to the legal academy and Amer...
Join Tom and Hilary Young, Associate Professor at the University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law, as...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
The seventy-fifth anniversary of the Nebraska Law Review provides an opportunity to ask whether or n...
The increased appearance of intervenors at the Supreme Court of Canada has received much attention s...
The Supreme Court of Canada has developed a practice of releasing some of the most important constit...
Legal citation is based primarily upon the writing habits of a particular profession - lawyers. In a...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...
Readers of court judgments will have observed that in the course of expressing reasons for the decis...
Scholars have long paid attention to how often and for what reasons Supreme Court justices cite law ...
Judges do not simply declare outcomes but also give reasons; in Canada, these reasons are typically ...
Martha Woodmansee has pointed out that the law has yet to be affected by the critique of authorshi...
In this paper, we spin the question “Will Women Judges Really Make a Difference?” in another directi...
Applicants to the federal judiciary identify three main audiences for their decisions: the involved ...
Before exploring the reasonable limits of judicial free speech, it is important to understand the ro...
Is there a disconnect between the priorities that make cases important to the legal academy and Amer...
Join Tom and Hilary Young, Associate Professor at the University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law, as...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
The seventy-fifth anniversary of the Nebraska Law Review provides an opportunity to ask whether or n...
The increased appearance of intervenors at the Supreme Court of Canada has received much attention s...
The Supreme Court of Canada has developed a practice of releasing some of the most important constit...
Legal citation is based primarily upon the writing habits of a particular profession - lawyers. In a...
In recent years, court opinions have chastised counsel’s briefs or other written submissions for suc...