Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis emphasize in Representing Justice that the traditional iconography of courthouses is incongruent with the current practices of the institutions that inhabit them. The key elements of traditional iconography - the blindfolded, scale-balancing Justitia and the courtroom configured for the trial-connote adjudication. Yet, the fraction of judicial work that involves deciding cases on the merits or conducting trials has decreased dramatically. Most judicial work today is basically managerial. We could reduce this incongruity, on the one hand, by reviving the practical adjudicatory focus of the past or, on the other, by revising the iconography to take account of the new practices. Resnik and Curtis encourage both ...
Ph. D. ThesisThis research intervenes in the material culture of the courthouse to establish new ri...
From Tavern to Courthouse examines the legal history of early Massachusetts through the lens of cour...
This essay is about portraits: judicial portraits. It offers a case study of the interface between l...
Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis emphasize in Representing Justice that the traditional iconography o...
Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis emphasize in Representing Justice that the traditional iconography o...
Representing Justice is a book of encyclopedic proportions on the iconography of justice and the org...
This six-meter aluminum windswept female form hangs as if a shingle on a busy street corner in Melbo...
The analysis of a work of art differs from legal analysis to the sole extent that the former necessa...
In Representing Justice, Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis call our attention to something hiding in p...
In several countries, governments have embarked on major building expansion programs for their judic...
On February 3rd and 4th last year, an impressive and diverse group of legal academics, judges, art h...
In the summer of 2003, The Economist ran a column criticizing the use by the United States of milita...
From a historical and anthropological point of view, there is a close link between religion and the ...
Theories of justice have not had much to say about the space in which it is administered. Renderings...
The U.S. Supreme Court has often been analyzed in light of its symbolic importance. While most such ...
Ph. D. ThesisThis research intervenes in the material culture of the courthouse to establish new ri...
From Tavern to Courthouse examines the legal history of early Massachusetts through the lens of cour...
This essay is about portraits: judicial portraits. It offers a case study of the interface between l...
Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis emphasize in Representing Justice that the traditional iconography o...
Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis emphasize in Representing Justice that the traditional iconography o...
Representing Justice is a book of encyclopedic proportions on the iconography of justice and the org...
This six-meter aluminum windswept female form hangs as if a shingle on a busy street corner in Melbo...
The analysis of a work of art differs from legal analysis to the sole extent that the former necessa...
In Representing Justice, Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis call our attention to something hiding in p...
In several countries, governments have embarked on major building expansion programs for their judic...
On February 3rd and 4th last year, an impressive and diverse group of legal academics, judges, art h...
In the summer of 2003, The Economist ran a column criticizing the use by the United States of milita...
From a historical and anthropological point of view, there is a close link between religion and the ...
Theories of justice have not had much to say about the space in which it is administered. Renderings...
The U.S. Supreme Court has often been analyzed in light of its symbolic importance. While most such ...
Ph. D. ThesisThis research intervenes in the material culture of the courthouse to establish new ri...
From Tavern to Courthouse examines the legal history of early Massachusetts through the lens of cour...
This essay is about portraits: judicial portraits. It offers a case study of the interface between l...