Justice John Paul Stevens, now starting his thirty-third full term on the Supreme Court, served as law clerk to Justice Wiley B. Rutledge during the Court’s 1947 Term. That experience has informed both elements of Stevens’s jurisprudence and aspects of his approach to his institutional role. Like Rutledge, Stevens has written powerful opinions on issues of individual rights, the Establishment Clause, and the reach of executive power in wartime. Stevens has also, like Rutledge, been a frequent author of dissents and concurrences, choosing to express his divergences from the majority rather than to vote in silence. Within his chambers, Stevens has in many ways adopted his own clerkship experience in preference to current models. Unlike the pr...
FIVE CHIEFS: A SUPREME COURT MEMOIR. By John Paul Stevens. New York: Little, Brown \u26 Co. 2011. 29...
Throughout his time on the Supreme Court, Justice John Paul Stevens consistently took the strict se...
This article explores the nature and origins of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens\u27 engageme...
Justice John Paul Stevens, now starting his thirty-third full term on the Supreme Court, served as l...
The role of law clerks at the United States Supreme Court has long been a source of curiosity among ...
Judicial scholars long have examined the external factors influencing U.S. Supreme Court decision ma...
Like many, I spent Wednesday, July 17 reflecting on the wonderful year I spent clerking for Justice ...
The great importance Justice John Paul Stevens attaches to his bonds with former colleagues has long...
In this column we commemorate Justice John Paul Stevens (April 20, 1920 – July 16, 2019). He served ...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
Written by former law clerks, legal scholars, biographers, historians, and political scientists, the...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
Few have served the public with greater distinction than Justice John Paul Stevens. That service beg...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, The Clerks to Justices George Sutherland and Pierce Butler, in Of Courti...
The Clerks to Justices George Sutherland and Pierce Butler is one essay among many contained in the ...
FIVE CHIEFS: A SUPREME COURT MEMOIR. By John Paul Stevens. New York: Little, Brown \u26 Co. 2011. 29...
Throughout his time on the Supreme Court, Justice John Paul Stevens consistently took the strict se...
This article explores the nature and origins of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens\u27 engageme...
Justice John Paul Stevens, now starting his thirty-third full term on the Supreme Court, served as l...
The role of law clerks at the United States Supreme Court has long been a source of curiosity among ...
Judicial scholars long have examined the external factors influencing U.S. Supreme Court decision ma...
Like many, I spent Wednesday, July 17 reflecting on the wonderful year I spent clerking for Justice ...
The great importance Justice John Paul Stevens attaches to his bonds with former colleagues has long...
In this column we commemorate Justice John Paul Stevens (April 20, 1920 – July 16, 2019). He served ...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
Written by former law clerks, legal scholars, biographers, historians, and political scientists, the...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
Few have served the public with greater distinction than Justice John Paul Stevens. That service beg...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, The Clerks to Justices George Sutherland and Pierce Butler, in Of Courti...
The Clerks to Justices George Sutherland and Pierce Butler is one essay among many contained in the ...
FIVE CHIEFS: A SUPREME COURT MEMOIR. By John Paul Stevens. New York: Little, Brown \u26 Co. 2011. 29...
Throughout his time on the Supreme Court, Justice John Paul Stevens consistently took the strict se...
This article explores the nature and origins of Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens\u27 engageme...