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Full-Text Articles in Law

Courts And New Democracies: Recent Works, Tom Ginsburg Jan 2012

Courts And New Democracies: Recent Works, Tom Ginsburg

Tom Ginsburg

Recent literature on comparative judicial politics reveals a variety of roles that courts adopt in the process of democratization. These include, very rarely, serving as a trigger for democratization and, more commonly, serving as downstream guarantor for departing autocrats or as downstream consolidator of democracy. In light of these roles, this article reviews six relatively recent books: Courts in Latin America, edited by Helmke and Rios-Figueroa (2011); Judges Beyond Politics in Democracy and Dictatorship: Lessons from Chile, by Hilbink (2007); Cultures of Legality: Judicialization and Political Activism in Latin America, edited by Couso, Huneeus, and Sieder (2011); The Legacies of …


On The Evasion Of Executive Term Limits, Tom Ginsburg Jan 2011

On The Evasion Of Executive Term Limits, Tom Ginsburg

Tom Ginsburg

Executive term limits are pre-commitments through which the polity restricts its ability to retain a popular executive down the road. But in recent years, many presidents around the world have chosen to remain in office even after their initial maximum term in office has expired. They have largely done so by amending the constitution, or sometimes by replacing it entirely. The practice of revising higher law for the sake of a particular incumbent raises intriguing issues that touch ultimately on the normative justification for term limits in the first place. This article reviews the normative debate over term limits and …


Lawrence Friedman’S Comparative Law, Tom Ginsburg Dec 2009

Lawrence Friedman’S Comparative Law, Tom Ginsburg

Tom Ginsburg

For over four decades, Lawrence Friedman has been one of the key figures in American law and society studies, as well as the country’s leading legal historian. His unique vantage point has brought him into contact with a wide range of subfields in legal studies, including comparative law. Though he has never published in the leading journals of the discipline, Friedman’s series of book chapters and articles commenting on the field of comparative law have articulated a consistent and important methodological challenge. This essay elaborates Friedman’s comparative jurisprudence and argues that comparative law since the 1960s would have been much …


Reputation, Information And The Industrial Organization Of The Judiciary, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa Feb 2009

Reputation, Information And The Industrial Organization Of The Judiciary, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa

Tom Ginsburg

The reputation of the judiciary, individually or as a whole, determines its status in any given society and its ability to compete effectively for resources. We analyze reputation and make three claims. First, reputation matters. Virtually every theory of judicial power is dependent, ultimately, on perceptions of judges, who famously lack the purse or the sword. Our second claim is that reputation can be divided into individual and collective components. Individual reputation provides information about individual performance whereas collective reputation provides information about the quality of the judiciary in general. We use the economics of team production to analyze the …


Guarding The Guardians: Judicial Councils And Judicial Independence, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa Jan 2009

Guarding The Guardians: Judicial Councils And Judicial Independence, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa

Tom Ginsburg

This Article uses comparative evidence to inform the ongoing debate about the selection and discipline of judges. In recent decades, many countries around the world have created judicial councils, institutions designed to maintain an appropriate balance between judicial independence and accountability. Our Article has two aims. First, we provide a theory of the formation of judicial councils and identify some of the dimensions along which they differ. Second, we test the extent to which different designs of judicial council affect judicial quality. We find that there is little relationship between councils and quality. We also offer a positive explanation for …


The Comparative Law And Economics Of Judicial Councils, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa Jan 2009

The Comparative Law And Economics Of Judicial Councils, Tom Ginsburg, Nuno Garoupa

Tom Ginsburg

No abstract provided.