Foreword: The Challenges of Judicial Independence Justice Richard J. Goldstone
Introduction: Judicial Independence in Context Adam Dodek & Lorne Sossin
PART I: THE LEGACY OF THE PROVINCIAL JUDGES REFERENCE
Chapter 1: The Bad Idea of Unwritten Constitutional Principles: Protecting Judicial Salaries Peter W. Hogg
Chapter 2: The Case for Dialogue in the Judicial Remuneration Process Lori Sterling & Sean Hanley
Chapter 3: Between the Judiciary and the Executive: The Elusive Search for a Credible and Effective Dispute-Resolution Mechanism Lorne Sossin
PART II: IN NEED OF BROADER REFORMS? — APPOINTMENTS AND COURT ADMINISTRATION
Chapter 4: "Be Careful What You Wish For": Administrative Independence and Alternative Models of Court Administration — The New Frontier Graeme G. Mitchell, Q.C.
Chapter 5: Should They All Just Get Along? — Judicial Ideology, Collegiality, and Appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada Benjamin Alarie & Andrew Green
Chapter 6: Promotion of Federally Appointed Judges and Appointment of Chief Justices: The Unfinished Agenda Jacob Ziegel
PART III: CONCEPTUAL AND PRACTICAL CHALLENGES TO JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE
Chapter 7: Reflections: On Judicial Diversity and Judicial Independence Sonia Lawrence
Chapter 8: Contradictory or Complementary?_ Reconciling Judicial Independence with Judicial Social Context Education Rosemary Cairns Way
Chapter 9: The Significance of Public Pressure on Judicial Independence Patricia Hughes
Chapter 10: Judicial Independence as a Public Policy Instrument Adam M. Dodek
Chapter 11: The Impact of Technology on Courts and Judicial Ethics: An Overview Karen Eltis
PART IV: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Chapter 12: Defending Judicial Independence in the British Constitution Graham Gee
Chapter 13: Judicial Independence and Impartiality in the United States?—Complexities and a Sometime Thing Jameson W. Doig
Chapter 14: Judicial Non-Dependence: Operational Closure, Cognitive Openness, and the Underlying Rationale of the Provincial Judges Reference—The Israeli Perspective Amnon Reichman
Chapter 15: The Judiciary in South Africa: Independence or Illusion? Penelope Andrews
Chapter 16: Independence and Impartiality in International Adjudication Fabien Gélinas
PART V: REFLECTIONS, NARRATIVES, AND CAUTIONARY TALES
Chapter 17: Further Reflections on A Place Apart: Judicial Independence and Accountability in Canada Martin L. Friedland
Chapter 18: The Media and Judicial Independence John Honderich
Chapter 19: Crisis in Pakistan Justice Robert J. Sharpe & Michelle Bradfield
Chapter 20: Going Too Far, Too Fast: Judicial Independence and Political Judgment Janice Gross Stein
Conclusion: A General Theory of Judicial Independence Revisited Peter H. Russell
Afterword: Judicial Independence in Canada—The Evolution Continues Justice Brian W. Lennox