Thursday, September 17, 2009


REGISTER NOW!
<http://zicklin.baruch.cuny.edu/centers/cci/events/american-justice-for-
sale> 

 

About the Program

Thirty-nine states currently select judges through elections. While the
electoral process allows the citizens to directly select judges, it also
poses a challenge to the foundation of the American legal system: the
right to equal treatment under law. Where judges are elected, regular
litigants and their counsel are free to donate and spend freely to elect
their preferred candidates.

 

The inherent conflicts in this process rise with the level of spending.
Maintaining the integrity and impartiality of our courts becomes
increasingly difficult where parties to litigation are major benefactors
of the judges hearing their cases. There is no national standard
governing when a judge must recuse himself from a case. Too often it is
left to the judge's discretion.

 

"American Justice for Sale?" will focus on the threat that unlimited
spending in judicial election poses to our judicial system and examine
the ethical challenges American corporations face when they participate
in the judicial electoral

process. The conference will be held on Constitution Day, a federal
observance of the ratification of the United State Constitution.

 

Registration
Complimentary pre-registration for this program is required.  
Act now as seating is limited!

To register:
Call 646-312-3231
E-mail [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 
or visit us online at 
http://zicklin.baruch.cuny.edu/centers/cci/events/american-justice-for-s
ale

Location

Baruch College Conference Center, Room 750

151 E. 25th Street (between Lexington and Third Aves.)

 

Time

4:00 PM  - Registration

4:30 PM - Panel 1

6:15 PM - Panel 2

 

Panels

Panel I will provide an overview of judicial elections and ethical
challenges that can arise from campaign contributions in these
elections.

 

*	Moderated by MARYA COTTON - Assistant Professor of Law, Baruch
College
*	JEFFREY BERGER - Mayer Brown
*	JAMES SAMPLE - Professor, Hofstra Law School; formerly director
of the Judicial Elections Project at the Brennan Center, New York
University
*	DOROTHY SAMUELS - member, New York Times Editorial Board; author
of The Selling of the Judiciary
*	ROY SCHOTLAND - Professor of Law, Georgetown University
*	The Hon. PENNY WHITE - Professor, University of Tennessee
College of Law; former justice on the Tennessee Supreme Court

 

Panel II will detail how corporations respond to these ethical
challenges.

 

*	Moderated by BRUCE FREED - President, Center for Political
Accountability
*	ROBERT ALT - Sr. Legal Fellow & Dep. Dir, Center for Legal &
Judicial Studies, The Heritage Foundation
*	RONALD BERENBEIM - Principal Researcher, Business Ethics, The
Conference Board
*	CHARLES GREZLAK - VP, Government Affairs & Policy, Merck & Co.,
Inc.
*	LANDON ROWLAND - Trustee, Committee for Economic Development;
former CEO of the Janus Funds
*	KARL SANDSTROM - Perkins Coie

 

Sponsors

Baruch College's Robert Zicklin Center for Corporate Integrity - a forum
for discussion of a broad range of contemporary issues confronting US
corporations and capital markets. For more information, visit 
http://zicklin.baruch.cuny.edu/centers/cci/.

 

Center for Political Accountability - A non-partisan, non-profit
organization, the CPA was founded in late 2003 and is dedicated to
ensuring transparency and accountability of corporate political spending
for the benefit of shareholders, the public, and the political process.
For more information, visit http://www.politicalaccountability.net/.

 

The Carol and Lawrence Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research at
the Wharton School - Established in 1997, the Zicklin Center sponsors
and disseminates leading research on business ethics and corporate
social responsibility. It supports research that considers the ethical
challenges that arise in complex business transactions. For more
information, visit www.zicklincenter.org.

 

 

Special thanks to the David Berg Foundation for their generous support
of this program.

 


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