The Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE) approves the role of law clerks assisting judges in their decision making but cautions against clerks replacing judges. In this article we put CCJE’s caution to a test and study law clerks at the Norwegian Supreme Court and the Borgarting and the Gulating courts of appeal, the country’s two largest courts of appeal. The general pattern for all three courts is that the pretext for hiring clerks changes from backlog problems to quality assurance, that clerks become organized in separate units, that the number of tasks performed by clerks increases, and that women constitute an outsized presence in the clerk units. The growth in clerks contribute to institutionalizing courts. We conclude that ...
The evaluation of judges’ performance takes place in many ways. Traditionally, there are avenues of ...
Past research has revealed conflicting findings regarding the degree to which judges on European ape...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
The Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE) approves the role of law clerks assisting judges ...
In Switzerland, law clerks hold an important position, which is a particularity of the Swiss judicia...
This Article is an examination of the work of judges’ law clerks, based on a variety of materials. I...
A Review of Law Clerks and the Judicial Process: Perceptions of the Qualities and Functions of Law ...
Virtually all judicial systems employ judicial staff members to assist judges in their work. However...
This Article is the first to examine the behavior of judges and their law clerks (officially entitle...
Former U.S. Supreme Court clerks are heavily recruited by select law firms, and many eventually find...
Today, law clerks and judicial assistants have an important position in the judicial decision making...
Supreme Court Justices exercise wide discretion when hiring law clerks. The Justices are constrained...
This Essay highlights the evolving institutional changes in the federal judiciary—a protracted confi...
In Lispky's seminal work (1980/2010), judges in local courts represent a distinct category of street...
Judicial independence is under threat in several democracies, and statutory reforms frequently targe...
The evaluation of judges’ performance takes place in many ways. Traditionally, there are avenues of ...
Past research has revealed conflicting findings regarding the degree to which judges on European ape...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
The Consultative Council of European Judges (CCJE) approves the role of law clerks assisting judges ...
In Switzerland, law clerks hold an important position, which is a particularity of the Swiss judicia...
This Article is an examination of the work of judges’ law clerks, based on a variety of materials. I...
A Review of Law Clerks and the Judicial Process: Perceptions of the Qualities and Functions of Law ...
Virtually all judicial systems employ judicial staff members to assist judges in their work. However...
This Article is the first to examine the behavior of judges and their law clerks (officially entitle...
Former U.S. Supreme Court clerks are heavily recruited by select law firms, and many eventually find...
Today, law clerks and judicial assistants have an important position in the judicial decision making...
Supreme Court Justices exercise wide discretion when hiring law clerks. The Justices are constrained...
This Essay highlights the evolving institutional changes in the federal judiciary—a protracted confi...
In Lispky's seminal work (1980/2010), judges in local courts represent a distinct category of street...
Judicial independence is under threat in several democracies, and statutory reforms frequently targe...
The evaluation of judges’ performance takes place in many ways. Traditionally, there are avenues of ...
Past research has revealed conflicting findings regarding the degree to which judges on European ape...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...