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Federal Judicial System

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Darlene R. Davis
January 1, 1991

The Judicial Conference Committee on the Judicial Branch appointed a subcommittee to study judicial evaluations and make recommendations. The subcommittee chose to initiate a pilot project of voluntary, confidential evaluations with the specific goal of judicial self-improvement.

Federal Courts Study Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States
July 1, 1990

The Federal Courts Study Committee's Working Papers and Subcommittee Reports constitute Part III of the Committee's report.

Federal Courts Study Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States
July 1, 1990

The Federal Courts Study Committee's Working Papers and Subcommittee Reports constitute Part III of the Committee's report.

Federal Courts Study Committee, Judicial Conference of the United States
April 2, 1990

The Federal Courts Study Committee was created in 1988 under the Judicial Improvements and Access to Justice Act (Pub. L. No. 100-702, 102 Stat. 4642, 4644) to examine problems and issues facing the federal courts.

Cynthia E. Harrison, Russell R. Wheeler, John Cooper Godbold, William Hubbs Rehnquist, Griffin B. Bell, John J. Gibbons, William J. Bauer, Martin H. Redish, Levin Hicks Campbell, Aloyisus Leon Higginbotham Jr., Jon O. Newman, Paul D. Carrington, William Judson Holloway Jr., Joseph Francis Weis Jr., William W Schwarzer, Laurence H. Tribe, Alvin B. Rubin, Robert C. Murphy, A. Leo Levin, Byron R. White, Donald Pomery Lay, Pierce Lively, Mary M. Schroeder, Charles Clark, Harrison L. Winter, Patricia McGowan Wald, Wilfred Feinberg, Howard T. Markey, Frank Morey Coffin, William J. Brennan Jr.
January 1, 1989

The October 1988 conference for all federal appellate judges recognized the 200th anniversary of the federal judicial system. It provided an opportunity for collective analysis on the future of the appellate courts.

Russell R. Wheeler, Cynthia E. Harrison
January 1, 1989

A historical survey published in connection with the bicentennial year of the First Judiciary Act, signed September 24, 1789.

January 1, 1987

A pamphlet which explains the operation of the federal courts, suitable for those with no legal background. It includes a glossary of terms.

Superseded by Federal Courts and What They Do (1997).

Elmo Bolton Hunter
January 1, 1986

A brief history of the administrative structure of the federal courts and the origins of the Judicial Conference of the United States. The author also describes the committee structure of the Judicial Conference, emphasizing the Court Administration Committee.

Joseph L. Ebersole
January 1, 1979

This paper was presented at the Seminar on Reform of Justice Administration in Mar Del Plata, Argentina, in October 1978. It is introduced with a brief comparison of the court systems of the United States and Argentina.

January 1, 1978

Nineteen recommendations for modernizing and improving the federal court library system, based on a survey of the legal research facilities and library services throughout the federal court system.

Pages

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