Aims to promote the comparative study of judicial processes. This entails analyses of the various components of these processes: the legal profession, the judiciary, courts (as institutions), legal doctrines, legal cultures; and how these components relate to other political institutions and political systems such as executives, legislatures, political parties, constitutions, federalism, political culture.
- Conceptions of Democracy in Constitutional Adjudication
Chair: Dr. Max Steuer - Courts and Constitutions
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Courts and Judicial Independence
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Courts and Media
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Courts as Institutions: Issues of Design, Operations, and Adaptation
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Courts in Authoritarian and Hybrid Regimes
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - European and International Governance of Environmental Obligations in a Polarized World
Chair: Dr. Andreas Corcaci - Judicial Power at the Supranational Level
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - New Approaches to the Study of Courts
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Politics of Judicial Selection
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans - Relationships between Democracy and Courts
Chair: Dr. Rhonda Evans