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Articles 1 - 23 of 23
Full-Text Articles in Judges
Ethical Conduct In A Judicial Campaign: Is Campaigning An Ethical Activity?, J. Scott Gary
Ethical Conduct In A Judicial Campaign: Is Campaigning An Ethical Activity?, J. Scott Gary
Washington Law Review
The purpose of this comment is twofold. First, through a comprehensive survey of the codes that comprise the sources of legal ethics, the comment elucidates a body of ethical law governing the conduct of candidates in a judicial campaign. Second, after identifying the basic principle found to underlie these ethical codes, this comment argues that the scope of permissible judicial campaigning should be strictly confined.
Minnesota Rag, Terry Clayton Paulson
Minnesota Rag, Terry Clayton Paulson
University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review
No abstract provided.
Warren E. Burger And The Administration Of Justice, Edward A. Tamm, Paul C. Reardon
Warren E. Burger And The Administration Of Justice, Edward A. Tamm, Paul C. Reardon
BYU Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Court Years 1939-1975: The Autobiography Of William O. Douglas (1980), Ralph S. Tyler
The Court Years 1939-1975: The Autobiography Of William O. Douglas (1980), Ralph S. Tyler
Washington Law Review
Few Americans would claim objectivity on the subject of William O. Douglas. He inspired powerful reactions. I start by stating my deeply held admiration for Justice Douglas, a respect nurtured at a distance and from his writings. His writings brought Douglas the man and Douglas the Justice close to many who never met him. His words show him to be a man who cared profoundly about the world, its people, his country, and the law. Decades of American law students, particularly those like me who studied law in the 1960's and 1970's, listened to Justice Douglas, whether he was in …
Introduction, Jimmy D. Sharpe, Jo Hill Dobbins
Introduction, Jimmy D. Sharpe, Jo Hill Dobbins
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Chief Justice Earl Warren, Otis H. King
Chief Justice Earl Warren, Otis H. King
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Remarks, Potter Stewart
Justice John M. Harlan, Drew S. Days Iii
Justice John M. Harlan, Drew S. Days Iii
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Justice Byron R. White, Charles E. Daye
Justice Byron R. White, Charles E. Daye
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Justice William O. Douglas, Wiley A. Branton
Justice William O. Douglas, Wiley A. Branton
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Justice William Brennan, John Doar
Justice William Brennan, John Doar
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
Justice Potter Stewart, Vincent L. Broderick
Justice Potter Stewart, Vincent L. Broderick
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Nature Of The Constitutional Process: Equal Protection And The Burger Court, Albert Broderick
The Nature Of The Constitutional Process: Equal Protection And The Burger Court, Albert Broderick
North Carolina Central Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Ways Of A Judge: Reflections From The Federal Appellate Bench, By Frank M. Coffin (1980), Eugene A. Wright
The Ways Of A Judge: Reflections From The Federal Appellate Bench, By Frank M. Coffin (1980), Eugene A. Wright
Washington Law Review
Here is a book for which we judges have been waiting, but it is one that should be required reading for others, both within and without the profession. It comes at a time when much public attention and criticism have been directed toward the courts, the news media have given wide coverage to pending and decided cases, and an extraordinary number of federal judges have resigned their offices for more lucrative endeavors.
The Ways Of A Judge: Reflections From The Federal Appellate Bench, By Frank M. Coffin (1980), Eugene A. Wright
The Ways Of A Judge: Reflections From The Federal Appellate Bench, By Frank M. Coffin (1980), Eugene A. Wright
Washington Law Review
Here is a book for which we judges have been waiting, but it is one that should be required reading for others, both within and without the profession. It comes at a time when much public attention and criticism have been directed toward the courts, the news media have given wide coverage to pending and decided cases, and an extraordinary number of federal judges have resigned their offices for more lucrative endeavors.
Thoughts About Judging, Henry J. Friendly
Thoughts About Judging, Henry J. Friendly
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Judge by Patrick Devlin
The Changing Judiciary, Arthur Rosett
Justice Reed And His Family Of Law Clerks, Bennett Boskey
Justice Reed And His Family Of Law Clerks, Bennett Boskey
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Tribute To Justice Thurgood Marshall, William J. Brennan Jr.
Tribute To Justice Thurgood Marshall, William J. Brennan Jr.
Maryland Law Review
No abstract provided.
The Virginia Judicial Council's Intermediate Appellate Court Proposal, Martha B. Brissette
The Virginia Judicial Council's Intermediate Appellate Court Proposal, Martha B. Brissette
University of Richmond Law Review
The ever-expanding volume of appellate litigation in Virginia has engendered a crisis in appellate justice in this state which can be adequately addressed only by the creation of an intermediate appellate court. Not only is Virginia the most populous state without such an intermediate court, its highest court also has the largest caseload of any single state appellate court.
Judging The Judges: A Case Study In Judicial Responsibility, Maximilian J.B. Welker, Jr.
Judging The Judges: A Case Study In Judicial Responsibility, Maximilian J.B. Welker, Jr.
Seattle University Law Review
Scholarly and professional perceptions of the role of the judiciary, and hence of the responsibility of judges, have undergone radical change since the early 1900's, and judicial opinions have both reflected and been influenced by those perceptions. At the turn of the century, conceptual abstraction and logical consistency held sway. Formalism, however, gave way to Legal Realism in the 1920's and 30's. Of the many important contributions that Realism made to the way we think about law, the most fundamental was its recognition that formal rules do not mechanically govern the resolution of legal disputes. Under this conception, the dominant …
The Expanding Influence Of The Federal Magistrate, 14 J. Marshall L. Rev. 465 (1981), Thomas J. Platt
The Expanding Influence Of The Federal Magistrate, 14 J. Marshall L. Rev. 465 (1981), Thomas J. Platt
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.
Jury Trial, Progress, And Democracy, 14 J. Marshall L. Rev. 679 (1981), Richard S. Kuhlman, George C. Pontikes, William J. Stevens
Jury Trial, Progress, And Democracy, 14 J. Marshall L. Rev. 679 (1981), Richard S. Kuhlman, George C. Pontikes, William J. Stevens
UIC Law Review
No abstract provided.