Is judicial activism good or bad? Or can it be both? Dean Doug Cook of Regent Law School gave his definition of bad judicial activism is the judges taking the law into their own hands that should rightly belong to the legislature.’ But is there such a thing as good judicial activism, and what is it? Is it even practiced today?
Search
About
You are currently browsing the Virtue Magazine weblog archives for the month October, 2005.
Longer entries are truncated. Click the headline of an entry to read it in its entirety.
Latest
Archives
Categories
- Editorial (33)
- featured (34)
- Volume 1, Issue 1 (9)
- Volume 1, Issue 10 (9)
- Volume 1, Issue 11 (9)
- Volume 1, Issue 12 (15)
- Volume 1, Issue 13 (15)
- Volume 1, Issue 14 (10)
- Volume 1, Issue 15 (11)
- Volume 1, Issue 16 (12)
- Volume 1, Issue 17 (10)
- Volume 1, Issue 18 (9)
- Volume 1, Issue 19 (8)
- Volume 1, Issue 2 (11)
- Volume 1, Issue 20 (10)
- Volume 1, Issue 21 (10)
- Volume 1, Issue 22 (7)
- Volume 1, Issue 23 (9)
- Volume 1, Issue 24 (11)
- Volume 1, Issue 3 (11)
- Volume 1, Issue 4 (12)
- Volume 1, Issue 5 (10)
- Volume 1, Issue 6 (7)
- Volume 1, Issue 7 (15)
- Volume 1, Issue 8 (11)
- Volume 1, Issue 9 (10)
- Volume 2 Issue 18 (1)
- Volume 2, Issue 1 (11)
- Volume 2, Issue 10 (6)
- Volume 2, Issue 11 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 12 (7)
- Volume 2, Issue 13 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 14 (9)
- Volume 2, Issue 15 (10)
- Volume 2, Issue 16 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 17 (7)
- Volume 2, Issue 18 (16)
- Volume 2, Issue 19 (5)
- Volume 2, Issue 2 (9)
- Volume 2, Issue 20 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 21 (6)
- Volume 2, Issue 22 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 23 (6)
- Volume 2, Issue 24 (6)
- Volume 2, Issue 3 (7)
- Volume 2, Issue 4 (7)
- Volume 2, Issue 5 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 6 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 7 (7)
- Volume 2, Issue 8 (8)
- Volume 2, Issue 9 (8)

