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7 - Judicial selection, removal and discipline in the United States

from Part II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 September 2011

H. P. Lee
Affiliation:
Monash University, Victoria
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Summary

The United States has many systems of judicial selection, discipline and removal. The national courts (sometimes called the federal courts) and the fifty states differ quite substantially along these dimensions. This chapter describes the federal court system in some detail and provides a broad-brush overview of state judicial systems. There are perhaps two modest common characteristics among all these systems: (1) judicial selection in all the systems is, with minor exceptions, tightly connected to ordinary politics and judges individually or through their hierarchies play a relatively small role in judicial selection and removal; and (2) judges are initially appointed from the practicing bar at almost every level, with no strong expectation of promotion within the judicial hierarchy.

The national court system in the United States has four tiers. Initial decisions in many administrative matters, including immigration cases and disputed claims for payments to the disabled, are made by “administrative law judges.” These judges are appointed through merit-based processes within the administrative agency or bureaucracy they serve, although political appointees sometimes intervened in those processes in the Bush administration, and they are subject to discipline and removal through typical civil service mechanisms. Within the federal courts the lowest tier is occupied by “magistrate judges,” appointed within each district by the local judges and serving eight-year renewable terms. Magistrate judges make preliminary rulings in cases assigned to them by trial judges, make recommendations to those judges on dispositive questions and may try criminal cases, mostly minor offenses, with the defendant’s permission.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Binder, S. A.Maltzman, F.Advice and Dissent: The Struggle to Shape the Federal JudiciaryWashingtonBrookings Institution Press 2009Google Scholar
Goldman, S.Picking Federal Judges: Lower Court Selection from Roosevelt through ReaganNew Haven, CTYale University Press 1997Google Scholar
Scherer, N.Scoring Points: Politicians, Activists, and the Lower Federal Court Appointment ProcessStanford University Press 2005Google Scholar
Songer, D.Sheehan, R. S.Haire, S. B.Continuity and Change on the United States Courts of AppealsAnn Arbor, MIUniversity of Michigan Press 2000CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yalof, D. A.Pursuit of Justices: Presidential Politics and the Selection of Supreme Court NomineesUniversity of Chicago Press 1999Google Scholar
Comiskey, M.Seeking Justices: The Judging of Supreme Court NomineesLawrence, KAUniversity Press of Kansas 2004Google Scholar
Goings, K. W.The NAACP Comes of Age: The Defeat of Judge John J. ParkerBloomington, INIndiana University Press 1990Google Scholar
Berkson, L.Caulfield, R.Judicial Selection in the United States: A Special ReportAmerican Judicature Society 2004Google Scholar
Shugerman, J.The People’s Courts: The Rise of Judicial Elections and Judicial Power in AmericaCambridge, MAHarvard University Press 2011Google Scholar

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