This study finds that Congress removes court jurisdiction, and does so with increasing frequency over time. Institution-based models predict that Congress should strategically remove court review to control the judiciary’s influence over policy when congressional and court preferences differ. Administrative realities suggest that jurisdiction removals may be aimed at controlling litigation, not judicial ideology. Denying courts ’ review denies litigants court access, an action with ramifications for litigation driven costs, delays, and caseload pressures. Using a new database of all public laws containing jurisdiction stripping provisions from the 78th through the 108th Congresses, this study tests for relations between jurisdiction strippi...
The extent of Congress\u27s authority to control the jurisdiction of the federal courts has been the...
In his law review article, Professor Henry Hart responded to the questions of whether Congress had u...
Late in 1990, Congress passed a statute that confers on the district courts “supplemental jurisdicti...
Abstract: Positive political theory models predict that Congress removes jurisdiction strategically ...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
Separation of powers in the federal government inevitably generates conflicts among the branches. In...
What limits (if any) does the Constitution impose on congressional efforts to strip federal courts o...
Jurisdiction-stripping has long been a questionable component of Congress\u27s power to supervise th...
This paper examines the conditions under which Congress passes jurisdiction-granting legislation, le...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
article published in law reviewFew questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars...
The extent of Congress\u27s authority to control the jurisdiction of the federal courts has been the...
In his law review article, Professor Henry Hart responded to the questions of whether Congress had u...
Late in 1990, Congress passed a statute that confers on the district courts “supplemental jurisdicti...
Abstract: Positive political theory models predict that Congress removes jurisdiction strategically ...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
Separation of powers in the federal government inevitably generates conflicts among the branches. In...
What limits (if any) does the Constitution impose on congressional efforts to strip federal courts o...
Jurisdiction-stripping has long been a questionable component of Congress\u27s power to supervise th...
This paper examines the conditions under which Congress passes jurisdiction-granting legislation, le...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
article published in law reviewFew questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars...
The extent of Congress\u27s authority to control the jurisdiction of the federal courts has been the...
In his law review article, Professor Henry Hart responded to the questions of whether Congress had u...
Late in 1990, Congress passed a statute that confers on the district courts “supplemental jurisdicti...