This Article contains two parts. First, it sets forth the context of the symposium, including reflections on how judges are being selected now through the elective process, the need for a better approach to judicial selection, and the particular climate in New York at the time of the symposium and thereafter. The New York discussion will focus on the district court and Second Circuit decisions in Lopez Torres v. New York State Board of Elections, which exposed and struck down as unconstitutional New York’s scheme for selecting certain trial court judges, under which political party leaders dictated judicial selection. Second, it reviews the principal topics and themes of the symposium, including highlights of the presentations and articl...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
I am pleased to introduce this Judicial Symposium issue of the Akron Law Review. Having twice been e...
Transcript of the keynote address delivered at Fordham University School of law on April 7, 2006. T...
New York\u27s system of electing lower court judges has long been notorious for providing the appear...
The Symposium entitled Judicial Professionalism in a New Era of Judicial Selection, held on Octobe...
The article aims to introduce the selection of systems used throughout the United States of America ...
On February 27, 1974 Chief Judge Charles D. Breitel of the New York State Court of Appeals addressed...
The practice of selecting judges by popular election, commonplace among the American states, has rec...
This Article examines the process of judicial selection in New York State in light of the recent cou...
The subject of the selection of state court judges has many aspects, including the choice of the sel...
American states have experimented with different methods of judicial selection for two centuries, cr...
This article contains a selection of advice on how to improve the judicial selection system. The ar...
This introduction dedicates this edition of the Urban Law Journal to the memory of Judge Marilyn Hal...
This Essay, informed in significant part by personal experience, examines in greater detail some of ...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
I am pleased to introduce this Judicial Symposium issue of the Akron Law Review. Having twice been e...
Transcript of the keynote address delivered at Fordham University School of law on April 7, 2006. T...
New York\u27s system of electing lower court judges has long been notorious for providing the appear...
The Symposium entitled Judicial Professionalism in a New Era of Judicial Selection, held on Octobe...
The article aims to introduce the selection of systems used throughout the United States of America ...
On February 27, 1974 Chief Judge Charles D. Breitel of the New York State Court of Appeals addressed...
The practice of selecting judges by popular election, commonplace among the American states, has rec...
This Article examines the process of judicial selection in New York State in light of the recent cou...
The subject of the selection of state court judges has many aspects, including the choice of the sel...
American states have experimented with different methods of judicial selection for two centuries, cr...
This article contains a selection of advice on how to improve the judicial selection system. The ar...
This introduction dedicates this edition of the Urban Law Journal to the memory of Judge Marilyn Hal...
This Essay, informed in significant part by personal experience, examines in greater detail some of ...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
I am pleased to introduce this Judicial Symposium issue of the Akron Law Review. Having twice been e...