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Golden Gate University Law Review

2010

Federal courts

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Federal Jurisdiction, Susan H. Handelman Sep 2010

Federal Jurisdiction, Susan H. Handelman

Golden Gate University Law Review

No abstract provided.


Unfairness In Access To And Citation Of Unpublished Federal Court Decisions, Peter Jan Honigsberg, James A. Dikel Sep 2010

Unfairness In Access To And Citation Of Unpublished Federal Court Decisions, Peter Jan Honigsberg, James A. Dikel

Golden Gate University Law Review

An unfair system has evolved over the past fifteen years in the federal courts. The federal courts changed the concept of stare decisis. In 1972, the Judicial Conference of the United States decided that they needed to reduce the increasing workload of the federal judges. The best way to do so, they thought, was to distinguish between decisions. Some would be worthy of publication and some would not be. Thus, federal judges were instructed to separate out those rulings which would be useful to future litigants or which did more than merely repeat and mechanically apply well-settled rules of law. …


Gender, Affirmative Action, And Recruitment To The Federal Bench, Elliot E. Slotnick Sep 2010

Gender, Affirmative Action, And Recruitment To The Federal Bench, Elliot E. Slotnick

Golden Gate University Law Review

In the analysis which follows, an effort will be made to assess the historical record of the appointment of women to the federal bench. Extended consideration will be given to the Carter administration's judicial recruitment behavior in an effort to assess the thrust and implications of the President's affirmative action concerns. How successful was Carter in appointing women to the federal judiciary and how did the women appointees differ, if at all, from their male colleagues? Do women appointees follow a different "path" to the bench than males? Did affirmative action "dilute" the quality of the federal bench as many …