We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of our daily lives. Whether in support of Black Lives Matter or in opposition to mask mandates, people are in the streets resisting. Over the last decade, the perception of the fixity of our legal order has eroded and so, too, has the stability of our consensus that legality and morality are aligned. In this moment, the visibility and viability of resistance to law and civil government through social movements have surged. With the increasing salience of civil resistance resurfaces an old question: can (and should) judges seek to stand in solidarity with movements engaging in civil resistance? The classic answers to this question take two forms....
Allegations of voting on partisan or political lines has become a regular feature of discussions on ...
With the courts increasingly being the forum for legal disputes between those who demand change in t...
Courts are never able to live up to the standards set for them by legal scholars. We know that the s...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
Jurists are trained to value the rule of law and judges are expected to uphold same whatever the cir...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disob...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
Nowadays it is commonly accepted that some degree of judicial law making is necessary. However, judi...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
This Article considers a question rarely addressed: what is the role of the lawyer in a manifestly u...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
I am interested in exploring why some judges rhetorically portray themselves as tragic heroes who ar...
The article discusses judicial activism in the light of research into the attitudes of English judge...
The rule of law paradigm has long operated on the premise that independent judges disregard extraleg...
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
Allegations of voting on partisan or political lines has become a regular feature of discussions on ...
With the courts increasingly being the forum for legal disputes between those who demand change in t...
Courts are never able to live up to the standards set for them by legal scholars. We know that the s...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
Jurists are trained to value the rule of law and judges are expected to uphold same whatever the cir...
Article discusses a dilemma of judge facing a possibility (or necessity) of applying judicial disob...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
Nowadays it is commonly accepted that some degree of judicial law making is necessary. However, judi...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
This Article considers a question rarely addressed: what is the role of the lawyer in a manifestly u...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
I am interested in exploring why some judges rhetorically portray themselves as tragic heroes who ar...
The article discusses judicial activism in the light of research into the attitudes of English judge...
The rule of law paradigm has long operated on the premise that independent judges disregard extraleg...
This article is based on a speech delivered by Judge Frank M.Johnson, Jr. to the faculty and student...
Allegations of voting on partisan or political lines has become a regular feature of discussions on ...
With the courts increasingly being the forum for legal disputes between those who demand change in t...
Courts are never able to live up to the standards set for them by legal scholars. We know that the s...