In this study, we assess the impact of attitudinal and jurisprudential factors on the Supreme Court’s resolution of intercircuit conflicts. In doing so, we depart from earlier efforts to assess the impact of legal factors that conceptualize law as an external constraint. Instead, we view jurisprudential considerations in terms of the justices ’ efforts to adopt the most legally persuasive position in light of accepted methods of legal reasoning. Our analyses reveal that the justices are (1) more likely to follow the reasoning process adopted by the majority of circuits involved in the conflict, (2) less likely to adopt the conflict position marred by contrary dissents and concurrences in the circuit court opinions, and (3) more likely to ad...
An answer to the topical inquiry is A great deal but full explanation of the general answer to a v...
The Supreme Court of the United States has during a long time held an important role in forming the ...
Why do justices author or join separate opinions? Most attempts to address the dynamics of con-curre...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
In political science the well-known “Attitudinal Model ” of legal decision making dictates that judg...
This research effort attempts to determine the process used in the Court to select cases for review....
Judicial discretion is usually considered a legal phenomenon, related to jurisprudential questions a...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
In this Article, we offer a fuller jurisprudential analysis of the gatekeeping choices that the Just...
How does the separation of powers influence Supreme Court justices when they vote on the merits of c...
J udicial scholars often struggle to disentangle the effects of law and policy preferences on U.S.Su...
A good deal of scholarly evidence suggests that the decision making of the U.S. Supreme Court is aff...
The conventional wisdom is that judges at the U.S. Courts of Appeals are constrained decision-makers...
We theorize that if law matters in Supreme Court decision making, it matters not as a mechanistic fo...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
An answer to the topical inquiry is A great deal but full explanation of the general answer to a v...
The Supreme Court of the United States has during a long time held an important role in forming the ...
Why do justices author or join separate opinions? Most attempts to address the dynamics of con-curre...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
In political science the well-known “Attitudinal Model ” of legal decision making dictates that judg...
This research effort attempts to determine the process used in the Court to select cases for review....
Judicial discretion is usually considered a legal phenomenon, related to jurisprudential questions a...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
In this Article, we offer a fuller jurisprudential analysis of the gatekeeping choices that the Just...
How does the separation of powers influence Supreme Court justices when they vote on the merits of c...
J udicial scholars often struggle to disentangle the effects of law and policy preferences on U.S.Su...
A good deal of scholarly evidence suggests that the decision making of the U.S. Supreme Court is aff...
The conventional wisdom is that judges at the U.S. Courts of Appeals are constrained decision-makers...
We theorize that if law matters in Supreme Court decision making, it matters not as a mechanistic fo...
Do law clerks influence U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decisions in the Court’s agenda-setting stage? ...
An answer to the topical inquiry is A great deal but full explanation of the general answer to a v...
The Supreme Court of the United States has during a long time held an important role in forming the ...
Why do justices author or join separate opinions? Most attempts to address the dynamics of con-curre...