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Full-Text Articles in Rule of Law
Proof: The Rule Of Law’S Most Essential Element, Victor A. Bolden
Proof: The Rule Of Law’S Most Essential Element, Victor A. Bolden
Connecticut Law Review
In this seemingly apocalyptic age, when the rule of law appears under siege, the way forward should involve reaffirming our belief in the rule of law, through reaffirming the importance of proof to the rule of law. Indeed, proof is the rule of law’s most essential element, a significance codified in legal rules, exemplified by legal theory, and reflected in the main source of belief in the rule of law, its effectiveness.
The Perilous Focus Shift From The Rule Of Law To Appellate Efficiency, Elizabeth Lee Thompson
The Perilous Focus Shift From The Rule Of Law To Appellate Efficiency, Elizabeth Lee Thompson
Connecticut Law Review
We should be wary of reforms that are attractive in terms of saving time but have unnoticed substantive effects. . . . The great end for which courts are created is not efficiency. It is justice.
Charles Alan Wright (1966)1
Some of the most significant—and by some estimations the most controversial— transformations of the federal appellate system occurred in the late 1960s and 1970s. Many of the effects are still felt today, including the shift from oral argument for all appeals and the view that study and disposition of each appeal were exclusively judicial tasks, to the adoption of …
In Conversation With Stephen Gageler, Chief Justice Of The High Court Of Australia, Stephen Gageler, David Collins
In Conversation With Stephen Gageler, Chief Justice Of The High Court Of Australia, Stephen Gageler, David Collins
Judicature International
No abstract provided.