The United States judiciary demonstrates better than any other constitutional institution the inherent fragility of American democracy. There is a reasonable debate to be had over when and exactly how the Supreme Court squandered the precious legitimacy on which its very existence rests. Yet, today, observers must confront with renewed urgency the impact crater of discontent that has been driven into the institution. The Court has been weaponized, politicized, and villainized; it has been lionized for its institutional heft. But increasingly loud voices have called for foundational reforms. There is a scramble for solutions to check the Court’s newly-emboldened right-wing majority and their ruthless quest to destroy long-standing legal prec...
A review of Democracy by Decree: What Happens When Courts Run Government by Ross Sandler and David S...
For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While t...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...
The United States judiciary demonstrates better than any other constitutional institution the inhere...
Scholars have long worried about the legitimacy of the Supreme Court. But commentators have largely ...
Commentators offer the Justices consistent—if unsolicited—advice: tend to the Supreme Court’s instit...
Judicial independence seems under siege. President Trump condemns federal courts for their political...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
The debate about the legitimacy of judicial review has arguably been misframed. The question is not ...
For almost two hundred years, a basic tenet of American law has been that federal courts must genera...
The conventional story of the federal judiciary\u27s institutional growth begins with Marbury v. Mad...
The federal judiciary today takes certain things for granted. Political actors will not attempt to r...
Democracy by Decree is the latest contribution to a scholarly literature, now nearly thirty-years ol...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
The redistricting season is about to begin in full swing, and with it will come renewed calls for th...
A review of Democracy by Decree: What Happens When Courts Run Government by Ross Sandler and David S...
For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While t...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...
The United States judiciary demonstrates better than any other constitutional institution the inhere...
Scholars have long worried about the legitimacy of the Supreme Court. But commentators have largely ...
Commentators offer the Justices consistent—if unsolicited—advice: tend to the Supreme Court’s instit...
Judicial independence seems under siege. President Trump condemns federal courts for their political...
Many scholars believe that it is procedurally undemocratic for the judiciary to have an active role ...
The debate about the legitimacy of judicial review has arguably been misframed. The question is not ...
For almost two hundred years, a basic tenet of American law has been that federal courts must genera...
The conventional story of the federal judiciary\u27s institutional growth begins with Marbury v. Mad...
The federal judiciary today takes certain things for granted. Political actors will not attempt to r...
Democracy by Decree is the latest contribution to a scholarly literature, now nearly thirty-years ol...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
The redistricting season is about to begin in full swing, and with it will come renewed calls for th...
A review of Democracy by Decree: What Happens When Courts Run Government by Ross Sandler and David S...
For over two centuries Americans have debated whether judges should be elected or appointed. While t...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...