Who is to Judge?: The Perennial Debate Over Whether to Elect or Appoint America's Judges

Who is to Judge?: The Perennial Debate Over Whether to Elect or Appoint America's Judges

by Charles Gardner Geyh
Who is to Judge?: The Perennial Debate Over Whether to Elect or Appoint America's Judges

Who is to Judge?: The Perennial Debate Over Whether to Elect or Appoint America's Judges

by Charles Gardner Geyh

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Overview

An elected judiciary is virtually unique to the American experience and creates a paradox in a representative democracy. Elected judges take an oath to uphold the law impartially, which calls upon them to swear off the influence of the very constituencies they must cultivate in order to attain and retain judicial office. This paradox has given rise to perennially shrill and unproductive binary arguments over the merits and demerits of elected and appointed judiciaries, which this project seeks to transcend and reimagine. In Who Is to Judge?, judicial politics expert Charles Gardner Geyh exposes and explains the overstatements of both sides in the judicial selection debate. When those exaggerations are understood as such, it becomes possible to search for common ground and its limits. Ultimately, this search leads Geyh to conclude that, while appointive systems are a preferable default, no one system of selection is best for all jurisdictions at all times.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190887148
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 03/14/2019
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Charles Gardner Geyh is the John F. Kimberling Professor of Law at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law. He has authored or edited multiple books including Courting Peril (Oxford), Understanding Civil Procedure (edited with Gene Shreve and Peter Raven-Hansen), What's Law Got to Do with It?, and When Courts and Congress Collide.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: A Short and Pointed History of Judicial Selection
Chapter 3: The New Judicial Selection Landscape
Chapter 4: The Arguments
Chapter 5: Why Everyone is Wrong
Chapter 6: Managing the Selection Debate
Chapter 7: The Future of Judicial Selection
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