This paper argues that the expansion of the White House\u27s role in judicial appointments since the late 1970s, at the expense of the Senate, has contributed to heightened levels of ideological conflict and gridlock over the appointment of federal appeals court judges, by making a cooperative equilibrium difficult to sustain. Presidents have greater electoral incentive to behave ideologically, and less incentive to cooperate with other players in the appointments process, than do senators, who are disciplined to a greater extent in their dealings with each other by the prospect of retaliation over repeat play. The possibility of divided government exacerbates the difficulty of achieving cooperative equilibrium by making both the benefits o...
Political and partisan battles over nominees to the federal courts of appeal have reached unpreceden...
The problem of numerous, persistent vacancies in the federal judiciary continues to undermine expedi...
Scholars and politicians who closely track the federal judicial selection process appreciate that co...
Selection of federal appellate court judges is now extremely controversial. Slowed nominee processin...
One crucial locus of gridlock is appointments to the United States Courts of Appeals, which have gro...
This Essay, written for a symposium hosted by the Wisconsin Law Review on judicial nominations, anal...
The inauguration of President Bill Clinton, who will appoint more than three hundred new federal jud...
This research article focuses on a critical analysis of the process by which federal Supreme Court j...
Judicial selection for the United States Courts of Appeals has rarely been so controversial. Delay i...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
NPR\u27s Ayesha Rascoe speaks with professor Neal Devins of William & Mary Law School about whether ...
Scholars, policymakers, and journalists have bemoaned the emphasis on ideology over qualifications a...
I have twice been nominated to the federal bench by President Clinton. The first nomination, in Dece...
In recent years, many commentators have called for the depoliticization of the judicial appointmen...
This Review Essay explores the new politics of judicial appointments by addressing the important q...
Political and partisan battles over nominees to the federal courts of appeal have reached unpreceden...
The problem of numerous, persistent vacancies in the federal judiciary continues to undermine expedi...
Scholars and politicians who closely track the federal judicial selection process appreciate that co...
Selection of federal appellate court judges is now extremely controversial. Slowed nominee processin...
One crucial locus of gridlock is appointments to the United States Courts of Appeals, which have gro...
This Essay, written for a symposium hosted by the Wisconsin Law Review on judicial nominations, anal...
The inauguration of President Bill Clinton, who will appoint more than three hundred new federal jud...
This research article focuses on a critical analysis of the process by which federal Supreme Court j...
Judicial selection for the United States Courts of Appeals has rarely been so controversial. Delay i...
The recent partisan blocking of President Obama’s moderate Supreme Court appointment, Judge Merrick ...
NPR\u27s Ayesha Rascoe speaks with professor Neal Devins of William & Mary Law School about whether ...
Scholars, policymakers, and journalists have bemoaned the emphasis on ideology over qualifications a...
I have twice been nominated to the federal bench by President Clinton. The first nomination, in Dece...
In recent years, many commentators have called for the depoliticization of the judicial appointmen...
This Review Essay explores the new politics of judicial appointments by addressing the important q...
Political and partisan battles over nominees to the federal courts of appeal have reached unpreceden...
The problem of numerous, persistent vacancies in the federal judiciary continues to undermine expedi...
Scholars and politicians who closely track the federal judicial selection process appreciate that co...