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UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJC The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.CLE/CJE INFORMATION
2021 CLE Accreditation: Please check the AJEI 2021 Summit CLE Information Page for information which is updated as we file for CLE approval, and when CLE approval is received. PLEASE NOTE: This year, AJEI will apply for accreditation in the following states: AR, CA, CO, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MI, MN, JUDICIAL HEROES & LEGENDS: JUNE 2021 Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge inWWW.JUDGES.ORG
www.judges.org
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all.CIVIL MEDIATION
Mediation is an important option in every system of justice. Judges with mediation skills can have opportunities open up to them both on and off the bench. This five day, 40-hour course is hands-on, interactive, fast-paced and practical. Simulations, interpersonal skill development and role play enable participants to integratecommunication
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF LOGIC FOR LAW The above is an excerpt from Professor Douglas Lind’s book, Logic and Legal Reasoning (2nd ed., The National Judicial College Press, 2007). Lind, who is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Idaho in Moscow as well as an attorney, teaches the logic portion of The NJC’s Logic and Opinion Writing course. REMEMBERING PAM BRESNAHAN Remembering Pam Bresnahan. April 08, 2021. The College lost a friend who was one of the legal community’s most prominent and respected practitioners when Washington, D.C., attorney Pamela A. Bresnahan passed away March 31 at age 66. Ms. Bresnahan, who joined the NJC Board of Trustees only last year, was a past chair of the American Bar HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJC The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.CLE/CJE INFORMATION
2021 CLE Accreditation: Please check the AJEI 2021 Summit CLE Information Page for information which is updated as we file for CLE approval, and when CLE approval is received. PLEASE NOTE: This year, AJEI will apply for accreditation in the following states: AR, CA, CO, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MI, MN, JUDICIAL HEROES & LEGENDS: JUNE 2021 Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge inWWW.JUDGES.ORG
www.judges.org
WELCOME TO THE BENCH, AUGUST 2020 Welcome to the Bench, August 2020. August 18, 2020. Congratulations to the following judges who are either new to the bench or have recently been elected, appointed or hired for a new position. Mark Conner, Superior Court, Sussex County, Delaware. Shanaya Eyong, Justice of the Peace Court, New Castle County, Delaware.2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all.CIVIL MEDIATION
Mediation is an important option in every system of justice. Judges with mediation skills can have opportunities open up to them both on and off the bench. This five day, 40-hour course is hands-on, interactive, fast-paced and practical. Simulations, interpersonal skill development and role play enable participants to integratecommunication
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF LOGIC FOR LAW The above is an excerpt from Professor Douglas Lind’s book, Logic and Legal Reasoning (2nd ed., The National Judicial College Press, 2007). Lind, who is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Idaho in Moscow as well as an attorney, teaches the logic portion of The NJC’s Logic and Opinion Writing course. HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.OUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.OUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all.OUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
CLE/CJE INFORMATION
2021 CLE Accreditation: Please check the AJEI 2021 Summit CLE Information Page for information which is updated as we file for CLE approval, and when CLE approval is received. PLEASE NOTE: This year, AJEI will apply for accreditation in the following states: AR, CA, CO, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MI, MN, WEBINAR | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Doing Justice Through Court Interpreting. Fundamentals of Evidence: Web-Based. Taking the Bench: An Interactive, Online Course for New Judges. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web-Based. Designing and Presenting: A Faculty Development Workshop.WWW.JUDGES.ORG
www.judges.org
PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in FACULTY | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Faculty. The overwhelming majority of NJC courses are taught by active and retired judges who volunteer their time. They are evaluated by class participants, so, in effect, they complete for the honor of teaching their fellow judges. Other faculty include professional instructors and experts in a variety of fields such as accounting, lawand
WELCOME TO THE BENCH, AUGUST 2020 Welcome to the Bench, August 2020. August 18, 2020. Congratulations to the following judges who are either new to the bench or have recently been elected, appointed or hired for a new position. Mark Conner, Superior Court, Sussex County, Delaware. Shanaya Eyong, Justice of the Peace Court, New Castle County, Delaware. ABOUT DIVIDING THE WATERS Dividing the Waters is for judges who adjudicate water litigation. The “conveners,” judges with experience in water adjudication, lead the program and invite other judges to join. But any judicial officer is welcome to join the network when adjudicating a case related to water. For more information, contact either Steve Snyder, executivedirector, or Joy
JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MILITARY COURTS-MARTIAL AND One of the biggest differences between the military and civilian justice systems is that there are no mistrials. That is because the military is one of the few jurisdictions that allows for split verdicts in criminal trials. The federal system and almost all states (Oregon and Louisiana excepted) require unanimous verdicts forcriminal trials.
HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.OUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
TRIBAL COURSES & CERTIFICATES Overview. About the NTJC. NTJC Staff. Tribal Advisory Board. Tribal Criminal Proceedings Enhancement Program Donate to the NTJC Tribal Resources Tribal Job and RFP Announcements. Tribal Courses & Certificates. Training and Technical Assistance. Tribal Courses &Certificates.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today.OUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
TRIBAL COURSES & CERTIFICATES Overview. About the NTJC. NTJC Staff. Tribal Advisory Board. Tribal Criminal Proceedings Enhancement Program Donate to the NTJC Tribal Resources Tribal Job and RFP Announcements. Tribal Courses & Certificates. Training and Technical Assistance. Tribal Courses &Certificates.
2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. WEBINAR | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Doing Justice Through Court Interpreting. Fundamentals of Evidence: Web-Based. Taking the Bench: An Interactive, Online Course for New Judges. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web-Based. Designing and Presenting: A Faculty Development Workshop. MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in ABOUT AJEI | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE The Appellate Judges Education Institute (AJEI) Summit, open to ALL judges and lawyers, is the preeminent provider of appellate judicial education in the United States. The annual AJEI Summit gathers federal and state appellate judges from across the country and invites all lawyers to join them for practical, cutting-edge, educational programming. Presenters include leading practitioners JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. FACULTY | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Faculty. The overwhelming majority of NJC courses are taught by active and retired judges who volunteer their time. They are evaluated by class participants, so, in effect, they complete for the honor of teaching their fellow judges. Other faculty include professional instructors and experts in a variety of fields such as accounting, lawand
WELCOME TO THE BENCH, AUGUST 2020 Welcome to the Bench, August 2020. August 18, 2020. Congratulations to the following judges who are either new to the bench or have recently been elected, appointed or hired for a new position. Mark Conner, Superior Court, Sussex County, Delaware. Shanaya Eyong, Justice of the Peace Court, New Castle County, Delaware. NATIONAL TRIBAL JUDICIAL CENTER ARCHIVE The National Judicial College is the BJA-designated Consolidated Tribal Assistance Solicitation (CTAS) Purpose Area 3 training and technical assistance provider. ABOUT DIVIDING THE WATERS Dividing the Waters is for judges who adjudicate water litigation. The “conveners,” judges with experience in water adjudication, lead the program and invite other judges to join. But any judicial officer is welcome to join the network when adjudicating a case related to water. For more information, contact either Steve Snyder, executivedirector, or Joy
9. THE EXPERT WITNESS 260 9.1 foundAtion for expert witneSS teStimony Daubert and Frye are discussed at length in Section 7 of this Bench Book and will not be rehashed here. The trial court has broad discretion to determine whether an expert’s testimony will be admitted in whole or in part. HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. RENO, NV | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE For more information, please contact the Registrar’s Office at (800) 255-8343 or registrar@judges.org. Ethics and Judging: Reaching Higher Ground (JS 601): Web. Based. Administrative Law: Fair2021 COURSE CATALOG
DATE Jan 11 – Feb 12 Jan 25 – Mar 12 Feb 22 – Apr 9 Mar 2 & 9 Mar 8 – Apr 23 Apr 12 – May 28 Apr 26 – May 6 Apr 26 – 29 May 17 – 27 May 24 – 26 JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND! Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJC The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in ABOUT AJEI | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE The Appellate Judges Education Institute (AJEI) Summit, open to ALL judges and lawyers, is the preeminent provider of appellate judicial education in the United States. The annual AJEI Summit gathers federal and state appellate judges from across the country and invites all lawyers to join them for practical, cutting-edge, educational programming. Presenters include leading practitionersOUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
THE NETWORK NOTE MAY 2021 Judicial Education Building, MS 358 • Reno, NV 89557 tel (775) 784-6747 • 800-25-JUDGE (800-255-8343) • fax (775) 784-4234 •www.judges.org/dtw
JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. DECISION MAKING (JS 618) During this course, you will learn to: Identify your own decision making style. Explore issues of fairness and equity. Examine the use of judicial discretion. Analyze conflicts of interest and ethical dilemmas. Recognize the factors that can cause an appellate court to overturn a decision. Write and communicate decisions more clearly. STRENGTHENING THE FOUNDATION OF A TRIBAL COURT: A SELF Online. December 31, 2021. Tribal court clerks are the backbone of tribal courts and are essential to the success within the judicial branch of government. This self-study course will address a clear relationship between the history and purpose of tribal courts and the role of the court clerk, discuss the role and tools of the courtclerk, and
HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGENATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGEWASHINGTON STATE JUDICIAL BRANCHNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE COURSESNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE FACULTYNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE WEBSITETHE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE RENO Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGETHE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE RENONATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE FACULTYNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE JOBSNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE NEVADANATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE COURSES 2020NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE ON DEMAND DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND!NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE ON DEMANDNJC STERLING CONJC DESIRE TO LEARN Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder 9. THE EXPERT WITNESS 260 9.1 foundAtion for expert witneSS teStimony Daubert and Frye are discussed at length in Section 7 of this Bench Book and will not be rehashed here. The trial court has broad discretion to determine whether an expert’s testimony will be admitted in whole or in part. HOME | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE | NJCABOUTCOURSES & DEGREESCOLLABORATIONSNEWS & INFORESOURCESDONATE The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. We provide online and in-person courses, certifications, news and resources to judges across the country. Discover how NJC can be a resource for you today. 2021 APPELLATE JUDGES EDUCATION INSTITUTE SUMMIT Mark your calendars for the 2021 AJEI Summit, the nation’s premier appellate educational event, to be held this year in Austin, Texas! Typically attended by 300 to 400 appellate judges and practitioners, the Summit will feature 20+ panel discussions on emerging trends, challenges and legal issues affecting appellate practitioners and the PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGENATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGEWASHINGTON STATE JUDICIAL BRANCHNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE COURSESNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE FACULTYNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE WEBSITETHE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE RENO Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in UPCOMING CONFERENCES Adjudicating Groundwater: A Judge’s Guide to Understanding Groundwater and Modeling. Hydrological Modeling Bench Book. Water and Growing Cities: A Survey of Western State Water Requirements for Urban Development. Mitigating the Exercise of Water Rights and Water Use: A White Paper on Questions Judges May Consider. Water Science in theCourtroom.
NTJC STAFF | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGETHE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE RENONATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE FACULTYNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE JOBSNATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE NEVADANATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE COURSES 2020NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE ON DEMAND DIRECTOR Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) Hon. Jan W. Morris (Ret.) is the Director of the National Tribal Judicial Center at the National Judicial College. Prior to joining the Tribal Center, he worked exclusively in tribal courts for 30 years in criminal, civil, and juvenile tribal law. MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. JUDGES - WELCOME TO NJC ON-DEMAND!NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE ON DEMANDNJC STERLING CONJC DESIRE TO LEARN Your username and password are the same as NJC registration; click here for a reminder or if you have never registered for a course at NJC. click here for a reminder 9. THE EXPERT WITNESS 260 9.1 foundAtion for expert witneSS teStimony Daubert and Frye are discussed at length in Section 7 of this Bench Book and will not be rehashed here. The trial court has broad discretion to determine whether an expert’s testimony will be admitted in whole or in part. PRESIDENT | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Hon. Benes Z. Aldana (Ret.) National Judicial College President Benes Z. Aldana, who has led the College since May 2017, is the former chief trial judge of the United States Coast Guard. He had a distinguished military career of 22 years and was the first Asian Pacific (Filipino) American chief trial judge in ABOUT AJEI | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE The Appellate Judges Education Institute (AJEI) Summit, open to ALL judges and lawyers, is the preeminent provider of appellate judicial education in the United States. The annual AJEI Summit gathers federal and state appellate judges from across the country and invites all lawyers to join them for practical, cutting-edge, educational programming. Presenters include leading practitionersOUR COURSES
Founded in 1963, The National Judicial College is the nation’s leading provider of judicial education. Our mission remains asrelevant as ever.
MOST JUDGES BELIEVE THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM SUFFERS July 14, 2020. By Anna-Leigh Firth. The majority of judges believe that racism is systemic in the United States’ criminal justice system, according to the NJC’s monthly survey of its alumni. In the survey, emailed the first week of July, 65 percent of the 634 judges who responded answered yes to the question, “Do you believe thatsystemic
FACULTY | THE NATIONAL JUDICIAL COLLEGE Faculty. The overwhelming majority of NJC courses are taught by active and retired judges who volunteer their time. They are evaluated by class participants, so, in effect, they complete for the honor of teaching their fellow judges. Other faculty include professional instructors and experts in a variety of fields such as accounting, lawand
THE NETWORK NOTE MAY 2021 Judicial Education Building, MS 358 • Reno, NV 89557 tel (775) 784-6747 • 800-25-JUDGE (800-255-8343) • fax (775) 784-4234 •www.judges.org/dtw
IMPAIRED DRIVING CASE ESSENTIALS Impaired driving cases are often very technical and involved cases, which require a lot of specialized knowledge on the part of not only the attorneys, but also the judges. In addition, judges should be well-equipped with the methods needed to reduce the recidivism of repeat offenders. This course is designed to provide judges with anoverview
JUSTICE IN A CIRCLE: HOW A PEACEMAKING COURT WORKS The peacemaking session in our court starts with the parties, judges, advisers, social services, or others sitting at a round table. The judges do not wear robes; business or traditional attire is appropriate. The round table and lack of formal attire help provide a level playing field for all. NATIONAL TRIBAL JUDICIAL CENTER ARCHIVE The National Judicial College is the BJA-designated Consolidated Tribal Assistance Solicitation (CTAS) Purpose Area 3 training and technical assistance provider. JUDICIAL WRITING (JS 615) This course applies advanced composition principles to judicial writing at all levels of judicial work. Beginning with questions of aim, audience and style, we will go on to consider best practices in legal and judicial writing at this historical moment, and think together about relationships between decision-making anddecision-writing.
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* Courses Across the Country* Webcasts
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* The NJC can create a custom-designed course to suit your organization’s needs* Scholarships
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* Certificates & Degrees * Certificate Program* FAQ
* Master’s and Ph.D. * Judicial Studies Degree Courses * Justice Management* Donate
* Donate to the NJC
* Making the Case for _The NJC Experience._ * Giving Opportunities* Endowments
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* Tribal Self-Study
* NTJC Staff
* Tribal Advisory Board* NTJC Partners
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* Tribal Resources
* Tribal Court Administrator & Court Clerk Resources* Resources
* Science Bench Book for Judges* Affiliates
* _DIVIDING THE WATERS_: A resource for judges resolving waterconflicts
* Websites
* Capital Cases Resources * Commericial Drivers’ Licensing Resources * Sentencing Sex Offenders* Resources
* Publications
* Custom Courses
* International Services * SMART Training and TA Initiative * Principles of Civility * Unfair Criticism of Judges * Resources for Judges: The Jury Trial* Judicial Security
* Links
* News
* Press Releases
* Judicial Edge
* Name that…
* Reflections from the Bench * Ask the Model Code* Faculty News
* Case in Point
* Tribal Center News * Advancement of Justice Award* Contact Us
* The NJC Shop
* NJC Podcast
* Home
* About
* The NJC Experience* History
* Model Courtroom
* Boards, Faculty, and The NJC Team* Board of Trustees
* Board of Visitors
* Emeritus Trustees
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* Faculty
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* Title VI
* More
* Partners
* Employment
* Courses
* Current Courses
* Past Courses
* Courses Across the Country* Webcasts
* Web Courses
* Web Self-Study
* Custom Courses
* The NJC can create a custom-designed course to suit your organization’s needs* Scholarships
* Reno Hotels
* Enrollment FAQ
* Certificates & Degrees * Certificate Program* FAQ
* Master’s and Ph.D. * Judicial Studies Degree Courses * Justice Management* Donate
* Donate to the NJC
* Making the Case for _The NJC Experience._ * Giving Opportunities* Endowments
* Flanagan Fund
* Planned Giving
* Scholarship Fund
* Animal Law Justice Fund* Donor Wall
* Annual Reports
* Tribal Center
* Tribal Criminal Proceedings Enhancement Program* News
* Courses
* Tribal Self-Study
* NTJC Staff
* Tribal Advisory Board* NTJC Partners
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* Tribal Court Administrator & Court Clerk Resources* Resources
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* _DIVIDING THE WATERS_: A resource for judges resolving waterconflicts
* Websites
* Capital Cases Resources * Commericial Drivers’ Licensing Resources * Sentencing Sex Offenders* Resources
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Communications Specialist 2020-05-26T15:40:26+00:00 THE RULE OF LAW IS POWERFUL AND FRAGILE; IT’S YOUR JOB TO PROTECT IT*
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