Judicial process -- United States
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Judicial process -- United States
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Judicial process
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- Subject of25
- The U.S. Supreme Court, a very short introduction, Linda Greenhouse
- Reading law, the interpretation of legal texts, Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner ; [foreword by Frank H. Easterbrook]
- Your court system and you, produced by Doculink
- First among equals, the Supreme Court in American life, Kenneth W. Starr
- Laboratory of justice, the Supreme Court's 200-year struggle to integrate science and the law, David L. Faigman
- Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, free speech and the living Constitution, H.L. Pohlman
- Are judges political?, an empirical analysis of the federal judiciary, Cass R. Sunstein ... [et al.]
- Active liberty, interpreting our democratic Constitution, Stephen Breyer
- Reflections on judging, Richard A. Posner
- Jurismania, the madness of American law, Paul F. Campos
- Storm center, the Supreme Court in American politics, David M. O'Brien, University of Virginia
- Legal blame, how jurors think and talk about accidents, Neal Feigenson
- Radicals in robes, why extreme right-wing courts are wrong for America, Cass R. Sunstein
- Contempt, how the right is wronging American justice, Catherine Crier
- The company they keep, how partisan divisions came to the Supreme Court, Neal Devins, Lawrence Baum
- Judicial process in America, Robert A. Carp, Ronald Stidham, Kenneth L. Manning
- Right wing justice, the conservative campaign to take over the courts, Herman Schwartz
- The U.S. Supreme Court, a very short introduction, Linda Greenhouse
- A republic, if you can keep It, Neil M. Gorsuch with Jane Nitze and David Feder
- The federal courts, challenge and reform, Richard A. Posner
- Flunking democracy, schools, courts, and civic participation, Michael A. Rebell
- Felix Frankfurter, judicial restraint and individual liberties, Melvin I. Urofsky
- Against the death penalty, Justice Stephen Breyer ; edited by John Bessler
- Punishment without crime, how our massive misdemeanor system traps the innocent and makes America more unequal, Alexandra Natapoff