Vol. 29 No. 3, February 2002
Index
- Reflections upon judicial independence as we approach the bicentennial of Marbury v. Madison: safeguarding the constitution's "crown jewel".
- Telephone justice, pandering, and judges who speak out of school.
- The walking judge from Alabama.
- Preserving judicial independence: an exegesis.
- Beyond merit selection.
- If you gag the lawyers, do you choke the courts? Some implications for judges when funding restrictions curb advocacy by lawyers on behalf of the poor.
- The cycle of judicial elections: Texas as a case study.
- May judges attend privately funded educational programs? Should judicial education be privatized? Questions of judicial ethics and policy.
- The ethical foundations of American judicial independence.
- In the eye of the hurricane: Florida courts, judicial independence, and politics.
- Judging judges: securing judicial independence by use of judicial performance evaluations.
- Access to justice: on dialogues with the judiciary.
- Unbundled legal services: untying the bundle in New York State.
- Equal protection denied in New York to some family law litigants in supreme court: an assigned counsel dilemma for the courts.
- In defense of ghostwriting.
- Civil legal assistance for low-income persons: looking back and looking forward.
- The law school consortium project: law schools supporting graduates to increase access to justice for low and moderate-income individuals and communities.
- The public is willing.
- Traveling justice: providing court based pro se assistance to limited access communities.
- Access to justice in Idaho.
- From "renegade" agency to institution of justice: the transformation of Legal Services Corporation.
- Don't confuse metatags with initial interest confusion.