NCJ Number
84720
Journal
Policy Studies Journal Volume: 10 Issue: 4 Dated: (June 1982) Pages: 668-679
Date Published
1982
Length
12 pages
Annotation
Innovation in judicial administration has proceeded slowly for many reasons. The attitudes of judges not inclined by training toward management, the tradition of judicial independence, and the separation of powers are examined as contributing factors inhibiting judicial modernization.
Abstract
Federal judicial reform has depended historically upon the leadership of a Chief Justice of the United States willing to use the office to dramatize and promote the issues. The most recent period of dramatic change in judicial administration, from 1969-1981, is reviewed with a focus upon the strategies for change employed by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. (Author abstract)