To effectively run a courtroom, the judge needs to be in charge. Perhaps because of that, judges are classically viewed as leaders. That view, in turn, frequently places judges in leadership for various outside-of-the-courtroom endeavors, both within and outside of the court system. But the best leadership styles for these various settings can be quite different. Judicial leadership that works well in running a courtroom may fail miserably outside of the courtroom. That is true in off-the-bench efforts both inside and outside of the court system
If every court achieved 99.9 percent quality for litigants, should we be satisfied? In other endeavo...
Being AJA president has put me in a sort of catbird seat attending a number of events that provide t...
Chief judges wield power. Among other things, they control judicial assignments, circulate petitions...
While the literature on leadership is vast and continues to expand at a rapid rate and while educati...
In this issue we bring you a collection of articles addressing judicial leadership and management sk...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
This article examines chief justice leadership of the United States Supreme Court during the judicia...
Chief Justice John Roberts famously described the role of a judge as that of a baseball umpire, pass...
60 Looking at Judiciary Leadership from the Demand Side: Judges: “Invisible Leaders”? 68 On Leadersh...
For the past 35 years I have been practicing in, teaching, and writing about the Family Court. The p...
This Article offers a formal legal definition of “leadership” drawn from an unusual quarter: crimina...
This paper is the final product of a research oriented project in which I studied leadership within ...
This paper examines judicial leadership on the UK Supreme Court. It does not confine itself to the f...
Founded in 1959, the American Judges Association has long been “The Voice of the Judiciary®.” This r...
Former Congresswoman Barbara Jordan once said what the people want is an America as good as its prom...
If every court achieved 99.9 percent quality for litigants, should we be satisfied? In other endeavo...
Being AJA president has put me in a sort of catbird seat attending a number of events that provide t...
Chief judges wield power. Among other things, they control judicial assignments, circulate petitions...
While the literature on leadership is vast and continues to expand at a rapid rate and while educati...
In this issue we bring you a collection of articles addressing judicial leadership and management sk...
Court Review, the quarterly journal of the American Judges Association, invites the submission of un...
This article examines chief justice leadership of the United States Supreme Court during the judicia...
Chief Justice John Roberts famously described the role of a judge as that of a baseball umpire, pass...
60 Looking at Judiciary Leadership from the Demand Side: Judges: “Invisible Leaders”? 68 On Leadersh...
For the past 35 years I have been practicing in, teaching, and writing about the Family Court. The p...
This Article offers a formal legal definition of “leadership” drawn from an unusual quarter: crimina...
This paper is the final product of a research oriented project in which I studied leadership within ...
This paper examines judicial leadership on the UK Supreme Court. It does not confine itself to the f...
Founded in 1959, the American Judges Association has long been “The Voice of the Judiciary®.” This r...
Former Congresswoman Barbara Jordan once said what the people want is an America as good as its prom...
If every court achieved 99.9 percent quality for litigants, should we be satisfied? In other endeavo...
Being AJA president has put me in a sort of catbird seat attending a number of events that provide t...
Chief judges wield power. Among other things, they control judicial assignments, circulate petitions...