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Judges

Duke Law

Series

2010

Judges

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Power Of Posner: A Study Of Prestige And Influence In The Federal Judiciary, Ryan P. Thompson, Christopher C. Mccurdy Jan 2010

The Power Of Posner: A Study Of Prestige And Influence In The Federal Judiciary, Ryan P. Thompson, Christopher C. Mccurdy

Duke Law Student Papers Series

Some judges have a disproportionate influence over the American judiciary; existing research has shown Judge Richard Posner is one of those judges. Our goal was to identify and determine how Judge Posner’s influence has changed over time. To measure and track his influence, we collected and compared citation and invocation data from three distinct time frames. While these measurements are imperfect, they can help illustrate the level of influence and prestige Judge Posner enjoys. The existing literature led us to expect Judge Posner’s early citation rates to be low. After several years on the bench, the citation rates for each …


All Rise! Standing In Judge Betty Fletcher’S Court, Thomas D. Rowe Jr. Jan 2010

All Rise! Standing In Judge Betty Fletcher’S Court, Thomas D. Rowe Jr.

Faculty Scholarship

In this essay, based on a talk given at the Washington Law Review’s March 2009 symposium in honor of Senior Ninth Circuit Judge Betty Binns Fletcher and her three decades of service on that court, I selectively survey her opinions on justiciability issues: standing, ripeness, mootness, and political questions. A significant starting point for this survey is Professor Richard Pierce’s 1999 law review article, Is Standing Law or Politics?, arguing that many Supreme Court votes in standing cases generally, and appellate judges’ votes in environmental-standing cases specifically, can be explained better on the basis of politics than by reference to …