How can we assess relative bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Justices cast two votes in every case, one during the initial conference and one on the final merits of the case. Between these two votes, a justice is assigned to draft the majority opinion. We argue that vote switching can be used to detect the power of opinion authors over opinion content. Bargaining models make different predictions for opinion content and therefore for when other justices in the initial majority should be more or less likely to defect from initial positions. We derive hypotheses for how opinion authorship should affect vote switching and find that authorship has striking effects on switching. Authors thus have disproportionate influence and by extens...
This Article asks whether observable conflicts between Supreme Court justices—interruptions between ...
Analyzing strategic aspects of judicial decisionmaking is an important element in understanding how ...
This article will consider the implications of a rare, but conceptually significant, phenomenon in S...
How can we assess relative bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Justices cast two votes in eve...
How can we assess bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Do authorship and opin-ion assignment a...
We formulate a new game-theoretic model of bargaining on the US Supreme Court. In the model, a degre...
We present the first formal model of opinion assignment on the Supreme Court. The model simultaneous...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
We formulate a new game-theoretic model of bargaining on the U.S. Supreme Court. In the model, a deg...
ABSTRACT Recent research has demonstrated that the preferences of US Supreme Court justices are not ...
helpful conversations on this work. 1 This paper uses evidence of voting change among U.S. Supreme C...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
Understanding the source of voting changes by appellate judges provides an important window into the...
In every case in which the United States Supreme Court hears oral argument and decides by an opinion...
This Article asks whether observable conflicts between Supreme Court justices—interruptions between ...
Analyzing strategic aspects of judicial decisionmaking is an important element in understanding how ...
This article will consider the implications of a rare, but conceptually significant, phenomenon in S...
How can we assess relative bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Justices cast two votes in eve...
How can we assess bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Do authorship and opin-ion assignment a...
We formulate a new game-theoretic model of bargaining on the US Supreme Court. In the model, a degre...
We present the first formal model of opinion assignment on the Supreme Court. The model simultaneous...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
We formulate a new game-theoretic model of bargaining on the U.S. Supreme Court. In the model, a deg...
ABSTRACT Recent research has demonstrated that the preferences of US Supreme Court justices are not ...
helpful conversations on this work. 1 This paper uses evidence of voting change among U.S. Supreme C...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
Understanding the source of voting changes by appellate judges provides an important window into the...
In every case in which the United States Supreme Court hears oral argument and decides by an opinion...
This Article asks whether observable conflicts between Supreme Court justices—interruptions between ...
Analyzing strategic aspects of judicial decisionmaking is an important element in understanding how ...
This article will consider the implications of a rare, but conceptually significant, phenomenon in S...