We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. Politics (and ideology) surely has a role to play in the selection of justices. However, the present level of partisan bickering has resulted in delays in judicial appointments as well as undermined the public\u27s confidence in the objectivity of justices selected through such a process. More significantly, much of the politicking is not transparent, often obscured with statements on a particular candidate\u27s merit - casting a taint on all those who make their way through the judicial nomination process. We argue that the benefits from introducing more (and objective) competition among judges are potentially significant and the likely dam...
The stakes for the selection of judges have never been so high. Federal and state court judges have ...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cl...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cla...
The impetus for the Article was frustration with the current judicial appointments process. Both sid...
How ought we to select judges? One possibility is that each of us should campaign for the selection ...
This Article reviews some of the factors that have diminished the appeal of merit selection for judg...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Judges are expected to satisfy two conflicting ideals. First, they are to follow the law without fea...
In "An Empirical Ranking of Judicial Performance" (S. Cal. L. Rev. (2004)), Professors Steven Choi a...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
The judicial-merit selection and retention system for appointing judges to the bench was designed to...
The stakes for the selection of judges have never been so high. Federal and state court judges have ...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
We suggest a Tournament of Judges where the reward to the winner is elevation to the Supreme Court. ...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cl...
The judicial appointments process has grown increasingly frustrating in recent years. Both sides cla...
The impetus for the Article was frustration with the current judicial appointments process. Both sid...
How ought we to select judges? One possibility is that each of us should campaign for the selection ...
This Article reviews some of the factors that have diminished the appeal of merit selection for judg...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
Judges are expected to satisfy two conflicting ideals. First, they are to follow the law without fea...
In "An Empirical Ranking of Judicial Performance" (S. Cal. L. Rev. (2004)), Professors Steven Choi a...
This Article seeks to transcend perennial election versus appointment debates-including debates over...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
The judicial-merit selection and retention system for appointing judges to the bench was designed to...
The stakes for the selection of judges have never been so high. Federal and state court judges have ...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...