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statement · 12 March 2026 · 1 min read

A note on judicial independence

Judicial independence is a maintained relationship, not a static property. Reform agendas that compress the structural features sustaining that relationship merit close, public attention.

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Editorial Board

Judicial independence is sometimes described as a static property of a constitutional system — present or absent, robust or weak. The description obscures more than it clarifies. Independence is a maintained relationship between the judiciary and the other branches of government, sustained by structural features that are themselves the product of choice.

Reform agendas that compress those structural features — appointment review, tenure protection, budgetary independence — merit close public attention. The Institute will continue to provide that attention in its published work.

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