CENTURY OF JUDGING (cl)University of Washington Press, 1988 - 379 páginas |
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Página 3
... concerned with either changing or maintaining the particular balance of values in society . Others , such as the state legislators , the governor , and those who are part of the state's bureaucracy , are involved even more directly in ...
... concerned with either changing or maintaining the particular balance of values in society . Others , such as the state legislators , the governor , and those who are part of the state's bureaucracy , are involved even more directly in ...
Página 9
... concerns of judges , lawyers , the bar , politicians , and the public for balancing the two contradictory de- siderata . Today judicial selection has achieved perhaps an ideal balance for the moment — between the needs of the judges for ...
... concerns of judges , lawyers , the bar , politicians , and the public for balancing the two contradictory de- siderata . Today judicial selection has achieved perhaps an ideal balance for the moment — between the needs of the judges for ...
Página 10
... concerns only to keep opportunities open and the rules of competition fair . The economic and social struggle must be allowed to be waged freely ( albeit within some limits ) , with those better able to compete and those who work harder ...
... concerns only to keep opportunities open and the rules of competition fair . The economic and social struggle must be allowed to be waged freely ( albeit within some limits ) , with those better able to compete and those who work harder ...
Página 18
... concern expressed by the new constitutions was with the legislature . Many of the detailed limita- tions on ... concerns of constitution writers 18 A Century of Judging.
... concern expressed by the new constitutions was with the legislature . Many of the detailed limita- tions on ... concerns of constitution writers 18 A Century of Judging.
Página 19
Charles H. Sheldon. As a consequence of these multiple concerns of constitution writers , the documents were longer , more detailed , and laden with what we today would regard as relatively mundane matters more appropri- ate for ...
Charles H. Sheldon. As a consequence of these multiple concerns of constitution writers , the documents were longer , more detailed , and laden with what we today would regard as relatively mundane matters more appropri- ate for ...
Índice
14 | |
27 | |
Recruitment in the Inaugural Years 18891912 | 41 |
From Party Lists to Separate Nonpartisan | 91 |
Transition to a Structured Recruitment | 131 |
Institutionalized Recruitment in the Modern | 153 |
The Survivors a Biographical Record | 198 |
The Business of the Supreme Court | 213 |
The 19034 Supreme Court | 255 |
The Court of 193940 | 278 |
The Modern Court | 305 |
Prospects for the Second Century | 335 |
Justices and Chief Justices of | 351 |
Bibliography | 355 |
369 | |
The Behaviors of Representative Courts | 241 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
accountability active American appointment attorneys ballot Bar Association bar poll bar's Beals Brachtenbach campaign Charles Chief Justice constitutional contested convention Court of Appeals court of last decisions Democratic Dolliver Donworth election electorate endorsements filed Finley Fullerton Geraghty Grady Hamley high bench high court Holcomb Horowitz Ibid incumbent initial involved issues January 14 John judicial candidates judicial recruitment judicial selection judiciary jurists King County labor Langlie law clerks Law Review lawyers legal profession legislative legislature Lister Mallery ment Millard names nomination nonpartisan November partisan Pemberton Pierce County political party position primary election Republican responsibilities role Rosellini Schwellenbach Seattle Bar Seattle Daily Seattle Post-Intelligencer Selection of Judges September served Spokane state's Steinert superior court superior court judge supreme court judges Table term territorial tion Tolman U.S. Supreme Court vacancy vote voters Wash Washington State Bar Washington State University Washington Supreme Court William
Passagens conhecidas
Página 18 - The Constitution was ordained and established by the people of the United States for themselves, for their own government, and not for the government of the individual States. Each State established a constitution for itself, and in that constitution provided such limitations and restrictions on the powers of its particular government as its judgment dictated. The people of the United States...
Referências a este livro
Political Science: The State of the Discipline II, Volume 2 Ada W. Finifter,American Political Science Association Visualização de excertos - 1993 |
Murdering Holiness: The Trials of Franz Creffield and George Mitchell Jim Phillips,Rosemary Gartner Pré-visualização limitada - 2003 |