Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of professional judges who share the duty to decide cases according to preexisting law. But such independence is less appropriate for those expected to make new law to govern future events. Indeed, in a democratic government those who make new law are expected to be accountable to their constituents, not independent of their interests and unresponsive to their desires. The Supreme Court of the United States has in the last century largely forsaken responsibility for the homely task of deciding cases in accord with preexisting law and has settled into the role of a superlegislature devoted to making new law to govern future events. Citizens who ...
For over one-hundred and fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has been the most powerful jud...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...
IT is a fact of which the laity may take public notice that the United States Supreme Court has expe...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
In this article, the author argues that the concept of judicial independence has served more as an...
article published in law reviewI begin with a question: why have a conference on judicial independen...
Judicial independence seems under siege. President Trump condemns federal courts for their political...
Judicial independence is a cornerstone of American constitutionalism. It empowers judges to check th...
One might begin by asking why we are having this symposium. Judicial independence arises infrequen...
The contemporary conversation about judicial independence does not much attend to transformations in...
This issue of the Mercer Law Review was stimulated in part by a concern expressed by some federal ju...
For over one-hundred and fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has been the most powerful jud...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...
IT is a fact of which the laity may take public notice that the United States Supreme Court has expe...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
Independence from extrinsic influence is, we know, indispensable to public trust in the integrity of...
In this article, the author argues that the concept of judicial independence has served more as an...
article published in law reviewI begin with a question: why have a conference on judicial independen...
Judicial independence seems under siege. President Trump condemns federal courts for their political...
Judicial independence is a cornerstone of American constitutionalism. It empowers judges to check th...
One might begin by asking why we are having this symposium. Judicial independence arises infrequen...
The contemporary conversation about judicial independence does not much attend to transformations in...
This issue of the Mercer Law Review was stimulated in part by a concern expressed by some federal ju...
For over one-hundred and fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has been the most powerful jud...
In Reconsidering Judicial Independence, Professor Stephen Burbank revisits the nature of the relatio...
IT is a fact of which the laity may take public notice that the United States Supreme Court has expe...