The Senate’s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its uninformative and “spectacle”-like nature. At the same time, Britain has established two new judicial appointments processes—to accompany its new Supreme Court and existing lower courts—in which Parliament plays no part. This Article seeks to understand the reasons for the inclusion and exclusion of the legislature in the U.S. and U.K. judicial appointment processes adopted at the creation of their respective Supreme Courts (albeit created 220 years apart*). The Article proceeds by highlighting the ideas and concerns motivating inclusion of the legislature in judicial appointments in the early American state constitutions, Articles of Confede...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
Imagine a championship football game where one team is allowed to pick all of the referees. Since th...
The Senate‘s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its u...
Throughout this nation\u27s history, Americans have turned to the Supreme Court to protect their rig...
In this article, I consider judicial disapproval as a form of non-binding review of the constitution...
This paper details the evolution of the Advice and Consent Clause of Article Two of the United State...
This research article focuses on a critical analysis of the process by which federal Supreme Court j...
This Essay, a response to Russell L. Weaver\u27s symposium contribution, Advice and Consent in His...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
Introduction to the Articles, The Broad Role by Robert P. Griffin, and The Discriminating Role by Ph...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
This article first briefly summarizes the issues that arise in the lower-court judicial confirmation...
The Article argues that the polarization in the appointments process for the United States Supreme C...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
Imagine a championship football game where one team is allowed to pick all of the referees. Since th...
The Senate‘s role in judicial appointments has come under increasingly withering criticism for its u...
Throughout this nation\u27s history, Americans have turned to the Supreme Court to protect their rig...
In this article, I consider judicial disapproval as a form of non-binding review of the constitution...
This paper details the evolution of the Advice and Consent Clause of Article Two of the United State...
This research article focuses on a critical analysis of the process by which federal Supreme Court j...
This Essay, a response to Russell L. Weaver\u27s symposium contribution, Advice and Consent in His...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
Introduction to the Articles, The Broad Role by Robert P. Griffin, and The Discriminating Role by Ph...
The role of the UK Supreme Court as conventionally understood is to give effect to, and not to chall...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
This article first briefly summarizes the issues that arise in the lower-court judicial confirmation...
The Article argues that the polarization in the appointments process for the United States Supreme C...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
Imagine a championship football game where one team is allowed to pick all of the referees. Since th...