By ALM Staff | April 15, 2018
Marcia Coyle catches up with Joshua Geltzer, founding executive director of the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University Law Center.
By Tony Mauro | March 26, 2018
Warm letters between the late Justice Brennan and Merrick Garland were among a section of Brennan's papers at the Library of Congress that were closed to the public until last year, the 20th anniversary of his death.
By Tony Mauro | March 19, 2018
His course book on constitutional law was a mainstay for generations of law school students, and he's credited with helping establish professional ethics as a formal piece of legal education.
By Marcia Coyle | March 14, 2018
A legal writing professor's examination of U.S. Supreme Court decisions shows the justices usually achieve unanimity on most matters of style. But on three points—conjunctions, possessives and fragments—the justices divide.
By Tony Mauro | March 2, 2018
The new plan mirrors a policy that collapsed in 2013 when fiercely competitive individual judges ignored the rules.
By Jonathan Ringel | February 6, 2018
Justice Sonia Sotomayor chuckled at how court members sometimes write in a decision, "The answer is clear." "If it was clear, there wouldn't be a split" in the circuit courts that led the high court to take the case in the first place, she said.
By Brenda Sapino Jeffreys | January 26, 2018
The Supreme Court justice spoke at the University of Houston Law Center, commenting on legal education, the quality of lawyers who argue before the Supreme Court and the intersection of politics and the law.
By Karen Sloan | January 22, 2018
The U.S. Supreme Court justice is kicking off a whirlwind tour of campuses, just days after the premier of a new documentary about her life.
By Karen Sloan | December 12, 2017
We collected the stories of four unlikely SCOTUS clerks to provide a glimpse of how hard work, happenstance and well-placed mentors can pave a nontraditional path to the U.S. Supreme Court. Here's what they had to say.
By Ross Todd | December 12, 2017
The 38 clerks that Stanford has sent over the past dozen years is about a third the amount sent by Harvard and Yale. The school has sent twice as many clerks to the court's liberal justices than its conservatives.
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