The article discusses judicial activism in the light of research into the attitudes of English judges, and a comparator group of US judges, towards judicial selection, judicial training and sentencing practice. Noting commonalities and shared perspectives, it is argued that the findings indicate enduring features of occupational culture that originate in relations within the legal workgroup and the practical craft of judging. Against the context of highly conventional attitudes, a conservative form of judicial activism is found in respect of resistance to legislative and policy innovation
Studies consistently demonstrate that the act of judging is influenced by judges personal perspectiv...
Nowadays it is commonly accepted that some degree of judicial law making is necessary. However, judi...
This article offers a brief comparative look at American and British jurisprudential pending selecti...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
Scholars who use empirical methods to study the behavior of judges long have labored in relative obs...
FræðigreinThis article reviews the quantitative literature on judicial review and judicial activism,...
The aim of this thesis is to formulate a concept of judicial activism which may be used in the analy...
Abstract Theories of government–international court relations assume that judges share an interest i...
Although there has been an explosion of empirical legal scholarship about the federal judiciary, wit...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
Which judges are “good” at their jobs, and which are not? The answer may depend on the ideology of w...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This Article offers a new approach to understan...
This article was commissioned by the Dutch judiciary for their judicial journal. It summarizes the 1...
This Article reports the results of a study on whether political predispositions influence judicial ...
Cultural cognition theory provides an anthropological- and psychological-based theory about how valu...
Studies consistently demonstrate that the act of judging is influenced by judges personal perspectiv...
Nowadays it is commonly accepted that some degree of judicial law making is necessary. However, judi...
This article offers a brief comparative look at American and British jurisprudential pending selecti...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
Scholars who use empirical methods to study the behavior of judges long have labored in relative obs...
FræðigreinThis article reviews the quantitative literature on judicial review and judicial activism,...
The aim of this thesis is to formulate a concept of judicial activism which may be used in the analy...
Abstract Theories of government–international court relations assume that judges share an interest i...
Although there has been an explosion of empirical legal scholarship about the federal judiciary, wit...
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law and legal order are a part of ...
Which judges are “good” at their jobs, and which are not? The answer may depend on the ideology of w...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This Article offers a new approach to understan...
This article was commissioned by the Dutch judiciary for their judicial journal. It summarizes the 1...
This Article reports the results of a study on whether political predispositions influence judicial ...
Cultural cognition theory provides an anthropological- and psychological-based theory about how valu...
Studies consistently demonstrate that the act of judging is influenced by judges personal perspectiv...
Nowadays it is commonly accepted that some degree of judicial law making is necessary. However, judi...
This article offers a brief comparative look at American and British jurisprudential pending selecti...