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51 Rutgers L. Rev. 1 (1998-1999)
The Integrity of the Judiciary in Twentieth-Century New York

handle is hein.journals/rutlr51 and id is 13 raw text is: RUTGERS LAW REVIEW
VOLUME 51                       Fall 1998                     NUMBER 1
THE INTEGRITY OF THE JUDICIARY IN
TWENTIETH-CENTURY NEW YORK
William E. Nelson*
In this Article, Professor William E. Nelson examines efforts to
preserve judicial integrity in twentieth-century New York. Professor
Nelson observes that the pattern of jurisprudential development in
New York is different from the pattern that prior historians, who
have focused on academic writing and Supreme Court case law, have
identified. He adds that the preservation of judicial integrity in New
York has been accomplished mainly through means other than an
adherence to precedent.
The Article begins by examining the development of specific proce-
dures, as well as changes in judicial attitudes towards both prece-
dent and judicial ethics in New York. It continues by describing the
failure of efforts to use the doctrine of precedent to preserve the integ-
rity of the judiciary. More recently, efforts to police judges have taken
the form of formalistic canons of ethics. Professor Nelson finds the
use of such canons to preserve the integrity and freedom from bias of
the bench has been as unsuccessful as classical legal theory's reliance
on precedent. Nonetheless, the Article concludes that although judg-
* Joel and Anne Ehrenkranz Professor of Law, New York University. A.B.,
Hamilton College, 1962; L.L.B., New   York University, 1965; Ph.D., Harvard
University, 1971. Helpful comments and criticisms were offered by Natalie Hull
and by the members of the Legal History Colloquium at New York University,
and the author is deeply grateful and indebted for this valuable assistance.
Research support was provided by the Filomen D'Agostino and Max E. Greenberg
Faculty Research Fund of New York University School of Law.

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