Publications
Judicial Advertising
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2009-10
How special interest "Super Spenders" threatened impartial justice and emboldened unprecedented legislative attacks on America's courts.
Authored by: the Brennan Center for Justice, Justice at Stake Campaign, and the National Institute of Money in State Politics
– 10/26/11
The New Politics of Judicial Elections, 2000-2009: Decade of Change
State judicial elections have been transformed during the past decade. The story of America’s 2000–2009 high court contests—tens of millions of dollars raised by candidates from parties who may appear before them, millions more poured in by interest groups, nasty and misleading ads, and pressure on judges to signal courtroom rulings on the campaign trail—has become the new normal.
For more than a decade, partisans and special interests of all stripes have been growing more organized in their efforts to use elections to tilt the scales of justice their way.
Authored by: the Justice at Stake Campaign, the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law, and the National Institute of Money in State Politics
– 08/16/10
Buying Justice: The Impact of Citizens United on Judicial Elections
The impact of the Citizens United decision will be most felt in judicial elections. Adam Skaggs looks at election spending history and what state laws Citizens United overturns to show how increased corporate spending in state judicial elections may threaten independent and impartial courts.
Authored by: Adam Skaggs
– 05/05/10
The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2006
This fourth edition of “The New Politics of Judicial Elections” shows how 2006 was the most threatening year yet to the fairness of America’s state courts. Special interest pressure is metastasizing into a permanent national campaign against impartial justice.
Authored by: James Sample, Lauren Jones and Rachel Weiss
– 05/17/07
The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2002: How The Threat To Fair And Impartial Courts Spread
This report shows how the threat to fair and impartial courts is spreading to more statesand how a recent Supreme Court decision could usher in a new era of special interest influence over the courts that protect our rights.
Authored by: Deborah Goldberg
– 05/06/04


