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Judges in Street Clothes - Acting Ethically Off-the-Bench (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,732
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Judges in Street Clothes - Acting Ethically Off-the-Bench (Hardcover)
Series: The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Law, Culture, and the Humanities
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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To maintain public confidence in the judiciary, judges are governed
by the strictest of ethical codes. Codes of conduct not only
circumscribe a judge's official conduct but also restrict every
aspect of a judge's off-bench life. Judges in Street Clothes:
Acting Ethically Off-the-Bench provides an in-depth analysis of the
rules limiting the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal,
civic, and law-related extrajudicial activities of state and
federal judges. This comprehensive, heavily footnoted resource
examines: (1) the historical development of the American Bar
Association's four model judicial codes with an emphasis on the
rules regulating the charitable, educational, religious, fraternal,
civic, and law-related activities of judges; (2) the State's
interests in restricting the extrajudicial activities of judges;
(3) the strengths and weaknesses of rules governing a judge's
off-bench activities; (4) how state and federal courts, judicial
disciplinary commissions, and judicial ethics advisory committees
have interpreted judicial conduct rules; (5) best practices for
judges; and (6) the constitutionality of the restrictions on a
judge's charitable, educational, religious, fraternal, civic, and
law-related undertakings. From both a theoretical and practical
standpoint, this book addresses the ethical implications of the
everyday activities of judges. How far may a judge go in expressing
personal opinions about social and legal issues? What are the
limits on a judge's use of social media? Is it permissible for a
judge to receive an award from a victim advocacy group? Do the
rules permit a judge to speak at a church or bar association's
fund-raising dinner? May judges teach prosecutors and law
enforcement officials how to improve their job performance? May a
judge appear in an informational video for the judge's alma mater?
Former judge Raymond J. McKoski discusses these and a host of other
everyday situations judges face in their attempts to remain
involved community members while promoting public confidence in the
independence, integrity, and impartiality of the judiciary.
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