This essay addresses how ALJ final order authority in many state systems of administrative governance (among them Florida, Louisiana, Missouri, and South Carolina) poses a tension between independence and accountability. It is argued that political accountability is sacrificed where reviewing courts defer to ALJ final orders on issues of law and policy. Standards of review provide state courts with a way of restoring the balance between independence and accountability, but reviewing courts should heighten the deference they give to the agency\u27s legal and policy positions -- giving little or no deference to the ALJ on these issues -- even where the ALJ\u27s decision had final status
This article discusses judicial appointment and judicial independence in Colorado. The article argu...
Apart from robed judges in federal courtrooms, a legion of judges reside in federal agencies—adminis...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...
The article examines the threat to judicial independence from political calls for more judicial ac...
The question of judicial accountability and independence arises primarily in the context of state co...
This article discusses and evaluates several forms of accountability in the administrative law judic...
article published in law reviewThis Article contends that the current law governing judicial review ...
textThe special role courts play in a democracy requires designers of constitutions to consider the ...
There may be no state interest more compelling than the independence, impartiality, and integrity of...
The single largest cadre of federal adjudicators goes largely ignored by scholars, policymakers, cou...
If a faceless staff permit writer is not held accountable to the courts, then she probably is not ac...
Debates over the best methods for selecting judges in the United States usually turn on finding an a...
Because courts are both conflict-resolving and lawmaking bodies, they should be both independent and...
In this overview, I begin by describing the five different systems of state judicial selection that ...
This Note concludes that the federal government should adopt some form of central panel system to pr...
This article discusses judicial appointment and judicial independence in Colorado. The article argu...
Apart from robed judges in federal courtrooms, a legion of judges reside in federal agencies—adminis...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...
The article examines the threat to judicial independence from political calls for more judicial ac...
The question of judicial accountability and independence arises primarily in the context of state co...
This article discusses and evaluates several forms of accountability in the administrative law judic...
article published in law reviewThis Article contends that the current law governing judicial review ...
textThe special role courts play in a democracy requires designers of constitutions to consider the ...
There may be no state interest more compelling than the independence, impartiality, and integrity of...
The single largest cadre of federal adjudicators goes largely ignored by scholars, policymakers, cou...
If a faceless staff permit writer is not held accountable to the courts, then she probably is not ac...
Debates over the best methods for selecting judges in the United States usually turn on finding an a...
Because courts are both conflict-resolving and lawmaking bodies, they should be both independent and...
In this overview, I begin by describing the five different systems of state judicial selection that ...
This Note concludes that the federal government should adopt some form of central panel system to pr...
This article discusses judicial appointment and judicial independence in Colorado. The article argu...
Apart from robed judges in federal courtrooms, a legion of judges reside in federal agencies—adminis...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...