1,364 research outputs found

    Watching the Judiciary Watch the Police

    Get PDF
    A Review of Police Practices and the Law: Essays from the Michigan Law ReviewThe University of Michigan Pres

    STUDY: Study of Appellate Reversals

    Get PDF

    The Supreme Court—Then and Now

    Get PDF

    The Resource Page- 48

    Get PDF
    In contrast to many memoirs now being published, Benched is not the story of a miserable childhood, a struggle against enormous odds, or escape from a dysfunctional family. Rather, its author, Judge Jon O. Newman, tells of his balanced and uncommonly productive life, much of it spent as a federal judge for the district court and then the court of appeals for the Second Circuit. Judge Newman’s path to the federal appellate bench was paved with well-connected mentors, who seemed eager to provide him with opportunity after opportunity. However, the book shows that this “charmed” career was the result not just of luck, but of his obvious competence and deep willingness to take on thankless duties. Judge Newman attended Princeton University and Yale Law School and then served as a law clerk on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. This clerkship led, remarkably, to an offer to serve as a clerk for Chief Justice Earl Warren, even though he had not formally applied for the position. The section on his time at the Court provides a fascinating, if all-too-brief, glimpse of its workings at the time

    Rethinking Fairness: Perspectives on the Litigation Process

    Get PDF

    My First Appellate Argument: It Can Only Get Better

    Get PDF
    • …
    corecore