PODCAST: Law and Politics: The Case of State Judicial Elections 

Summary:

Alicia Bannon, Director of the Judiciary Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, discusses the politics of state judicial elections with Associate Dean Rodger Citron.  In 38 states, judges are elected.  As Bannon describes, judicial elections used to be “sleepy” – not much campaigning was done and not much money was spent.  For a number of reasons, that has changed.  In 2023, for example, about $51 million was spent on the election of a state supreme court justice in Wisconsin. 

Furthermore, as Bannon explains, state courts matter.  The most notable example of the importance of state courts is that they very well may have the final say on laws allowing or restricting access to abortion after the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization in 2022.  Bannon describes how judicial elections have become more politicized, what effect this has on the operation and perception of state judicial systems, and what, if anything, can be done in response to these developments.       

Brought to you by the Touro Law Review.    

Learn More About Alicia Bannon

Continue reading

PODCAST: NextGen Bar: A Shift for the Good?

Please join us for a in depth conversation hosted Associate Dean Michelle Zakarin with Assistant Dean Regina Burch regarding the switch from the Universal Bar Examination (UBE) to the NextGen bar examination (NextGen), rolling out in phases starting July 2026. Dean Burch discussed what is now tested, the new format, and gave tips on how students and schools can smoothly adjust to NextGen.

Brought to you by the Touro Law Review.   

Continue reading

PODCAST: New York and the Uniform Bar Exam

Associate Dean Rodger Citron discusses the Uniform Bar Exam (UBE) with the Hon. Alan D. Scheinkman, who, among other things, chaired the New York State Bar Association Task Force on the New York Bar Examination. They discuss the Task Force’s recommendation for New York to no longer use the UBE and instead develop its own bar exam.

Brought to you by the Touro Law Review

Our guest today is the Hon. Alan D. Scheinkman.

Continue reading