For many decades, scholars have puzzled over why the market for judicial clerks has been characterized by increasingly early bidding, with interviews and offers extended at progressively early points in a student\u27s law school career. An important article published recently by Jolls, Avery, Judge Posner and Alvin Roth reported the results of a study the authors conducted of judges and clerks documenting the many ways in which the market operated inefficiently. In their view, the clerk market corresponds to other markets studied chiefly by Roth that show timing disturbances claimed to be market failures. The authors recommended adoption of a modified matching program, similar to the program that matches medical residents with hospitals. Th...
This Comment examines the relationship among judges, law clerks, and the requirements placed on both...
Judicial scholars long have examined the external factors influencing U.S. Supreme Court decision ma...
Using original survey data, we explore how federal courts of appeals judges select and use their law...
For many decades, scholars have puzzled over why the market for judicial clerks has been characteriz...
For many decades, scholars have puzzled over why the market for judicial clerks has been characteriz...
In September 1998, the Judicial Conference of the United States abandoned its latest attempt to regu...
As the new millennium dawned, the market for federal judicial law clerks was in a state of near cris...
For many years, federal judges and others have labored to reform judicial clerkship hiring so judges...
In September 1993 the Judicial Conference of the United States unanimously adopted the following res...
Ten years ago, the judiciary instituted the Federal Law Clerk Hiring Plan, an employment system mean...
In this article, Professor Clark joins the debate over whether the federal judiciary should utilize ...
April may indeed have been the cruellest month this year for federal judges and their prospective ...
About the summer of 1875 Chief Justice Horace Gray of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ...
Law clerks have been part of the American judicial system since 1882, when Supreme Court Justice Hor...
For many, the judicial clerkship application process is, to quote Sir Winston Churchill, a “riddle w...
This Comment examines the relationship among judges, law clerks, and the requirements placed on both...
Judicial scholars long have examined the external factors influencing U.S. Supreme Court decision ma...
Using original survey data, we explore how federal courts of appeals judges select and use their law...
For many decades, scholars have puzzled over why the market for judicial clerks has been characteriz...
For many decades, scholars have puzzled over why the market for judicial clerks has been characteriz...
In September 1998, the Judicial Conference of the United States abandoned its latest attempt to regu...
As the new millennium dawned, the market for federal judicial law clerks was in a state of near cris...
For many years, federal judges and others have labored to reform judicial clerkship hiring so judges...
In September 1993 the Judicial Conference of the United States unanimously adopted the following res...
Ten years ago, the judiciary instituted the Federal Law Clerk Hiring Plan, an employment system mean...
In this article, Professor Clark joins the debate over whether the federal judiciary should utilize ...
April may indeed have been the cruellest month this year for federal judges and their prospective ...
About the summer of 1875 Chief Justice Horace Gray of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts ...
Law clerks have been part of the American judicial system since 1882, when Supreme Court Justice Hor...
For many, the judicial clerkship application process is, to quote Sir Winston Churchill, a “riddle w...
This Comment examines the relationship among judges, law clerks, and the requirements placed on both...
Judicial scholars long have examined the external factors influencing U.S. Supreme Court decision ma...
Using original survey data, we explore how federal courts of appeals judges select and use their law...