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Articles 1 - 10 of 10

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Role Of Appellate Court In Mandatory Sentencing Schemes, Larry I. Palmer Apr 1979

The Role Of Appellate Court In Mandatory Sentencing Schemes, Larry I. Palmer

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Low Pay Bodes Ill For Judges, Terry English Mar 1979

Low Pay Bodes Ill For Judges, Terry English

Sheldon Plager (1977-1984)

No abstract provided.


The Judicialization Of Federal Administrative Law Judges: Implications For Policymaking, Gerald M. Pops Feb 1979

The Judicialization Of Federal Administrative Law Judges: Implications For Policymaking, Gerald M. Pops

West Virginia Law Review

Students of the American federal administrative legal process have long debated the question of whether those persons charged with the responsibility for developing and conducting the formal hearing process and for making "initial decisions" in agency adjudication should act more like judges or more like administrators. Advocates of the judicial model of behavior seek to inject into the administrative process certain values inherent and traditional in Anglo-American courts. These values particularly, although not exclusively, include the protection of the personal, property and procedural rights of private citizens which have been developed by judges acting in their traditional capacities as makers …


Foreword: Homage To Mr. Justice Cardozo, Paul A. Freund Jan 1979

Foreword: Homage To Mr. Justice Cardozo, Paul A. Freund

Cardozo Law Review

No abstract provided.


Law, Literature And Cardozo's Judicial Poetics, Richard H. Weisberg Jan 1979

Law, Literature And Cardozo's Judicial Poetics, Richard H. Weisberg

Cardozo Law Review

No abstract provided.


A Personal View Of Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo: Recollections Of Four Cardozo Law Clerks, Joseph L. Rauh Jr., Melvin Siegel, Ambrose Doskow, Alan M. Stroock Jan 1979

A Personal View Of Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo: Recollections Of Four Cardozo Law Clerks, Joseph L. Rauh Jr., Melvin Siegel, Ambrose Doskow, Alan M. Stroock

Cardozo Law Review

A personal view of Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo and his approach to the law is perhaps best provided by those who worked under his direct tutelage. Four men who served as law clerks to the Justice during his six year term on the Supreme Court agreed to share their reflections on that experience in this commemorative volume. Joseph Rauh, the Justice's last law clerk, wrote first; his recollections were then circulated among the other three: Melvin Siegel, Ambrose Doskow and Alan M. Stroock. Their responses to Mr. Rauh's memories of the Justice and his judicial style present intriguing contrasts and …


Reflections On "The Nature Of The Judicial Process", Ernest Nagel Jan 1979

Reflections On "The Nature Of The Judicial Process", Ernest Nagel

Cardozo Law Review

More than half a century has gone by since Cardozo delivered the three series of lectures, subsequently published in three wellknown books, in which he presented his philosophy of law with impressive learning and arresting (but sometimes distracting) eloquence. His jurisprudential views as well as his judicial decisions were influential in his lifetime; and his philosophical writings continue to be read, though it is difficult to say how widely or with what effect on their readers. In any event, during the past fifty years there has been a renaissance of active interest in legal philosophy, in this country as well …


Judicial Legislation, Anthony D'Amato Jan 1979

Judicial Legislation, Anthony D'Amato

Cardozo Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Moral Element In Cardozo's Jurisprudence, Stanley C. Brubaker Jan 1979

The Moral Element In Cardozo's Jurisprudence, Stanley C. Brubaker

Cardozo Law Review

No abstract provided.


Cardozo's Appointment To The Supreme Court, Andrew L. Kaufman Jan 1979

Cardozo's Appointment To The Supreme Court, Andrew L. Kaufman

Cardozo Law Review

Shortly before noon on February 15, 1932, Herbert Cone, confidential clerk to the New York Court of Appeals, went to the Albany train station to pick up Chief Judge Benjamin Cardozo and to give him a message. He told Cardozo that Lawrence Richey, special secretary to President Hoover, had tried to reach him at his New York office earlier that morning and had asked that he call the President as soon as he reached Albany. Cardozo returned the President's call from his office at the Court of Appeals and received an offer of appointment as a Justice of the Supreme …