The right to an impartial arbiter is the bedrock of due process. Yet litigants in most state courts face judges subject to election and reelection - and therefore to majoritarian political pressures that would appear to undermine the judges\u27 impartiality. This tension has existed for as long as judges have been elected (and, to some extent, for as long as they have been appointed, in which case campaigns often take a less public but equally politicized form). In recent years, however, this tension has become more acute. Today, state courts around the country increasingly resemble - and are increasingly perceived to resemble - interest group battlegrounds in which judges represent particular constituencies in addition to, or even instead ...
In Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., decided in 2009, the Supreme Court held for the first time that...
The merits of judicial elections have been litigated in journals around the country. In light of th...
Most of the judges in America are elected. Yet the institution of the elected judiciary is in troubl...
The right to an impartial arbiter is the bedrock of due process. Yet litigants in most state courts ...
A centuries-old controversy asks whether judicial elections are inconsistent with impartial justice....
There is reason to believe that a majority of five justices can be persuaded to hold that the practi...
Judicial legitimacy rests on the perception of judicial impartiality. As a partisan gulf widens amon...
The merits of judicial elections have been litigated in journals around the country. In light of th...
This Note will argue that the improprieties arising from some campaign contributions are so egregiou...
In its cases dealing with judicial elections, the Court has cycled back and forth over whether to tr...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Republican Party of Minnesota v. White shows how unrealistic five...
In the United States, judges are required to recuse themselves - that is, remove themselves from par...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
In recent years, we have seen an escalation of attacks on the independence of the judiciary. Governm...
Apolitical, impartial judging has always been our judicial ideal. In the last twenty years, however,...
In Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., decided in 2009, the Supreme Court held for the first time that...
The merits of judicial elections have been litigated in journals around the country. In light of th...
Most of the judges in America are elected. Yet the institution of the elected judiciary is in troubl...
The right to an impartial arbiter is the bedrock of due process. Yet litigants in most state courts ...
A centuries-old controversy asks whether judicial elections are inconsistent with impartial justice....
There is reason to believe that a majority of five justices can be persuaded to hold that the practi...
Judicial legitimacy rests on the perception of judicial impartiality. As a partisan gulf widens amon...
The merits of judicial elections have been litigated in journals around the country. In light of th...
This Note will argue that the improprieties arising from some campaign contributions are so egregiou...
In its cases dealing with judicial elections, the Court has cycled back and forth over whether to tr...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Republican Party of Minnesota v. White shows how unrealistic five...
In the United States, judges are required to recuse themselves - that is, remove themselves from par...
Elections transform the basis of judicial legitimacy. Whereas a permanently appointed judiciary find...
In recent years, we have seen an escalation of attacks on the independence of the judiciary. Governm...
Apolitical, impartial judging has always been our judicial ideal. In the last twenty years, however,...
In Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., decided in 2009, the Supreme Court held for the first time that...
The merits of judicial elections have been litigated in journals around the country. In light of th...
Most of the judges in America are elected. Yet the institution of the elected judiciary is in troubl...