Judges on judging : views from the bench / collected and edited by David M. O'Brien.
2013
KF8775.A75 J82 2013 (Mapit)
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Details
Title
Judges on judging : views from the bench / collected and edited by David M. O'Brien.
Added Author
Edition
4th ed.
Imprint
Los Angeles, Calif. : Sage ; Thousand Oaks, Calif. : CQ Press, [2013]
Copyright
©2013
Description
x, 380 pages ; 23 cm
Formatted Contents Note
The doctrine of judicial review: Mr. Marshall, Mr. Jefferson, and Mr. Marbury
The Supreme Court in the American system of government
The two faces of judicial activism
Advice and consent in theory and practice
The "fight" theory versus the "truth" theory
The adversary judge: the experience of the trial judge
The business of the U.S. district courts
What I ate for breakfast and other mysteries of judicial decision making
Whose federal judiciary is it anyway?
What really goes on at the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court's conference
Deciding what to decide: the docket and the rule of four
The role of oral argument
The dissent: a safegaurd of democracy
Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States
The path of law
The judge as a legislator
The notion of a living constitution
A relativistic constitution
The jurisprudence of judicial restraint: a return to the moorings
Tradition and morality in constitutional law
What am I, a potted plant? The case against strict constitutionalism
Originalism: the lesser evil
Judging
The Constitution: a living document
The Constitution of the United States: contemporary ratification
On constitutional interpretation
Speaking in a judicial voice: reflections on Roe v. Wade
Our democratic constitution
Against constitutional theory
The Bill of Rights
Guardians of our liberties: state courts no less than federal
First things first: rediscovering the states' Bill of Rights
What does and does not ail state constitutional law.
The Supreme Court in the American system of government
The two faces of judicial activism
Advice and consent in theory and practice
The "fight" theory versus the "truth" theory
The adversary judge: the experience of the trial judge
The business of the U.S. district courts
What I ate for breakfast and other mysteries of judicial decision making
Whose federal judiciary is it anyway?
What really goes on at the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court's conference
Deciding what to decide: the docket and the rule of four
The role of oral argument
The dissent: a safegaurd of democracy
Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States
The path of law
The judge as a legislator
The notion of a living constitution
A relativistic constitution
The jurisprudence of judicial restraint: a return to the moorings
Tradition and morality in constitutional law
What am I, a potted plant? The case against strict constitutionalism
Originalism: the lesser evil
Judging
The Constitution: a living document
The Constitution of the United States: contemporary ratification
On constitutional interpretation
Speaking in a judicial voice: reflections on Roe v. Wade
Our democratic constitution
Against constitutional theory
The Bill of Rights
Guardians of our liberties: state courts no less than federal
First things first: rediscovering the states' Bill of Rights
What does and does not ail state constitutional law.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 353-376).
Location
STA
Call Number
KF8775.A75 J82 2013
Language
English
ISBN
9781452227832 paperback alkaline paper
1452227837 paperback alkaline paper
1452227837 paperback alkaline paper
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