Rise of Judicial Management in the U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas, 1955-2000University of Georgia Press, 1 Ιουλ 2010 - 576 σελίδες This is the first book-length study of a federal district court to analyze the revolutionary changes in its mission, structure, policies, and procedures over the past four decades. As Steven Harmon Wilson chronicles the court's attempts to keep pace with an expanding, diversifying caseload, he situates those efforts within the social, cultural, and political expectations that have prompted the increase in judicial seats from four in 1955 to the current nineteen. Federal judges have progressed from being simply referees of legal disputes to managers of expanding courts, dockets, and staffs, says Wilson. The Southern District of Texas offers an especially instructive model by which to study this transformation. Not only does it contain a varied population of Hispanics, African Americans, and whites, but its jurisdiction includes an international border and some of the busiest seaports in the United States. Wilson identifies three areas of judicial management in which the shift has most clearly manifested itself. Through docket and case management judges have attempted to rationalize the flow of work through the litigation process. Lastly, and most controversially, judges have sought to bring "constitutionally flawed" institutions into compliance through "structural reform" rulings in areas such as housing, education, employment, and voting. Wilson draws on sources ranging from judicial biography and oral-history interviews to case files, published opinions, and administrative memoranda. Blending legal history with social science, this important new study ponders the changing meaning of federal judgeship as it shows how judicial management has both helped and hindered the resolution of legal conflicts and the protection of civil rights. |
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... Amendment. The suits possessed fundamental differences, however, quite apart from the disparate size and complexity of the defendant school systems. The first major distinction is that only one of the two cases actually involved a claim ...
... Amendment.18 It was significant that the emphasis was on due process rights rather than on the equal protection rights at the heart of Brown. Neither the litigants nor Judge Allred asserted that the Supreme Court's ruling in support of ...
... Amendment . They slowly but surely chipped away at the edifice of “ Jim Crow . " 22 " 22 The Plessy decision merely ratified the status quo in many southern states , where Jim Crow already operated under the rules of " separate but ...
... Amendment. By the 1950s a host of federal and state judges across the Southwest had ruled in numerous cases that, for the purposes of racial classification, including the rules that defined Jim Crow, persons of Mexican descent were not ...
... Amendment. Rather, they stressed that, in creating segregation for the “other white” race, Texas authorities denied Mexican Americans due process, a right also guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment, which led to the loss of equal ...
Περιεχόμενα
1 | |
11 | |
Legislation Litigation and Judicial Economy | 50 |
The Rules and Exceptions of Border Justice | 93 |
Managing Our Federalism in the Southern District | 140 |
Judicial Management of Triethnic Integration | 189 |
Federal Criminal Justice on Trial in the 1970s | 233 |
Adjuncts and the Oversight of Corporate Misconduct | 281 |
Masters Magistrates and Managerial Judges | 327 |
Just Speedy and Inexpensive Resolutions | 355 |
Notes | 359 |
Selected Bibliography | 521 |
Index | 547 |
Άλλες εκδόσεις - Προβολή όλων
The Rise of Judicial Management in the U.S. District Court, Southern ... Steven Harmon Wilson Περιορισμένη προεπισκόπηση - 2002 |
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A Place of Recourse: A History of the U.S. District Court for the Southern ... Roberta Sue Alexander Περιορισμένη προεπισκόπηση - 2005 |