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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Impermeable Federalism, Pragmatic Silence, And The Long Range Plan For The Federal Courts, Lauren K. Robel
Impermeable Federalism, Pragmatic Silence, And The Long Range Plan For The Federal Courts, Lauren K. Robel
Indiana Law Journal
Symposium: The Indiana Law Journal Forum on the Long Range Plan for the Federal Courts
Proposed Long Range Plan For The Federal Courts: Ambition Or Abdication?, Myra C. Selby
Proposed Long Range Plan For The Federal Courts: Ambition Or Abdication?, Myra C. Selby
Indiana Law Journal
Symposium: The Indiana Law Journal Forum on the Long Range Plan for the Federal Courts
Federal Court Long Range Planning: Fine Lines And Tightropes, Sarah Evans Barker
Federal Court Long Range Planning: Fine Lines And Tightropes, Sarah Evans Barker
Indiana Law Journal
Symposium: The Indiana Law Journal Forum on the Long Range Plan for the Federal Courts
A Tribute To Justice Roger O. Debruler, Frank Sullivan Jr.
A Tribute To Justice Roger O. Debruler, Frank Sullivan Jr.
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Elbert Parr Tuttle, Alfred C. Aman
Paradise Lost, Paradigm Found: Redefining The Judiciary's Imperiled Role In Congress, Charles G. Geyh
Paradise Lost, Paradigm Found: Redefining The Judiciary's Imperiled Role In Congress, Charles G. Geyh
Articles by Maurer Faculty
Long perceived as acting in splendid isolation, the legislative and judicial branches have become increasingly intertwined. The judiciary is becoming more involved in the legislative province of statutory reform, and Congress has inserted itself more frequently into the judicial territory of procedural rulemaking. In this article, Professor Geyh observes that a new, interactive paradigm has replaced the perceived model of separation and delegation between the brandies. As the judiciary and Congress have grown more enmeshed, the judiciary's reputation has suffered, both from a Watergate-vintage mistrust of all things governmental and from a perception that judicial activism is born of self-interest …