Nearly four fifths of federal court of appeals opinions are unpublished. For more than 25 years, judges and scholars have debated the wisdom and fairness of this body of secret law. The debate over unpublished opinions recently intensified when the Eighth Circuit held that the Constitution requires courts to give these opinions precedential value. Despite continued controversy over unpublished opinions, limited empirical evidence exists on the nature of those opinions. Working with an especially complete dataset of labor law opinions and multivariate statistical methods, we were able to identify the factors that predict publication. Some of those factors, such as a decision to reverse the agency, track formal publication rules. Others, s...
The practice of unpublished decisions and their precedential value causes much controversy. The prac...
Under the standard account of judicial behavior when a panel of appellate court judges cannot agree ...
Many commentators, including Chief Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr., argue that unpublished opinions serv...
Permission to reprint granted to The Ohio State University Moritz Law Library by the Vanderbilt Law ...
Some legal researchers may assume that all cases decided by federal courts are published. However, m...
Most federal intermediate appellate court opinions are “unpublished”— they have no precedential valu...
The rise of cases brought before federal appellate courts has caused most opinions to be designated ...
This Article examines three of those practices: selective publication, summary disposition, and vaca...
Unpublished appellate judicial opinions present formidable challenges for modern legal researchers, ...
The federal courts of appeals have used unpublished opinions for thirty years as one method of cop...
Many appellate court opinions are unpublished and have no precedential value. Publication standards ...
This article discusses the courts\u27 adoption of the limited publication plans and analyzes the met...
An unfair system has evolved over the past fifteen years in the federal courts. The federal courts c...
Certain publication practices, especially dependence on issuing unpublished opinions, are one major ...
Nearly 90 percent of the work of the federal courts of appeals looks nothing like the opinions law s...
The practice of unpublished decisions and their precedential value causes much controversy. The prac...
Under the standard account of judicial behavior when a panel of appellate court judges cannot agree ...
Many commentators, including Chief Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr., argue that unpublished opinions serv...
Permission to reprint granted to The Ohio State University Moritz Law Library by the Vanderbilt Law ...
Some legal researchers may assume that all cases decided by federal courts are published. However, m...
Most federal intermediate appellate court opinions are “unpublished”— they have no precedential valu...
The rise of cases brought before federal appellate courts has caused most opinions to be designated ...
This Article examines three of those practices: selective publication, summary disposition, and vaca...
Unpublished appellate judicial opinions present formidable challenges for modern legal researchers, ...
The federal courts of appeals have used unpublished opinions for thirty years as one method of cop...
Many appellate court opinions are unpublished and have no precedential value. Publication standards ...
This article discusses the courts\u27 adoption of the limited publication plans and analyzes the met...
An unfair system has evolved over the past fifteen years in the federal courts. The federal courts c...
Certain publication practices, especially dependence on issuing unpublished opinions, are one major ...
Nearly 90 percent of the work of the federal courts of appeals looks nothing like the opinions law s...
The practice of unpublished decisions and their precedential value causes much controversy. The prac...
Under the standard account of judicial behavior when a panel of appellate court judges cannot agree ...
Many commentators, including Chief Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr., argue that unpublished opinions serv...