Attitudes about the Supreme Court differ sharply, particularly among academics. Law professors believe the Constitution and other laws constrain the Court, while most political scientists do not. These different perspectives on justices\u27 fidelity to the law ensure that legal scholars and political scientists have little to say about the Court that is of interest to each other. As a result, it should not be surprising that most legal scholars are unfamiliar with Harold Spaeth and Jeffrey Segal, the two political scientists most closely associated with the view that the law does not constrain the justices from voting their policy preferences. Building on social psychology research and theory, Spaeth initially constructed and Segal later jo...
Back in the 1940s the political scientist C. Herman Pritchett began tallying the votes and opinions ...
The aim of this thesis is to formulate a concept of judicial activism which may be used in the analy...
This Article seeks to examine and compare the judicial behaviors of the five conservative justices o...
Attitudes about the Supreme Court differ sharply, particularly among academics. Law professors belie...
This study expands Segal and Spaeth\u27s (2002) attitudinal model. This model is used to predict Su...
Political scientists have developed an attitudinal model, which explains that the Supreme Court deci...
Reviewing Ryan C. Black, Tim R. Johnson, and Justin Wedeking, Oral Arguments and Coalition Formation...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Political scientists have developed increasingly sophisticated understandings of the influences on S...
This article examines the relationship between Politics and Law in U.S. Supreme Court decision-makin...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
This study aims to explain why the Supreme Court responds to public mood by analyzing individual jus...
Over the past fifty years U.S. scholars have shown that a myriad of factors influence the judicial d...
In assessing how social forces may shape U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decision-making it has been pr...
If the mark of a seminal study is the quantity and quality of the progeny it spawns, then Robert A. ...
Back in the 1940s the political scientist C. Herman Pritchett began tallying the votes and opinions ...
The aim of this thesis is to formulate a concept of judicial activism which may be used in the analy...
This Article seeks to examine and compare the judicial behaviors of the five conservative justices o...
Attitudes about the Supreme Court differ sharply, particularly among academics. Law professors belie...
This study expands Segal and Spaeth\u27s (2002) attitudinal model. This model is used to predict Su...
Political scientists have developed an attitudinal model, which explains that the Supreme Court deci...
Reviewing Ryan C. Black, Tim R. Johnson, and Justin Wedeking, Oral Arguments and Coalition Formation...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Political scientists have developed increasingly sophisticated understandings of the influences on S...
This article examines the relationship between Politics and Law in U.S. Supreme Court decision-makin...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
This study aims to explain why the Supreme Court responds to public mood by analyzing individual jus...
Over the past fifty years U.S. scholars have shown that a myriad of factors influence the judicial d...
In assessing how social forces may shape U.S. Supreme Court Justices’ decision-making it has been pr...
If the mark of a seminal study is the quantity and quality of the progeny it spawns, then Robert A. ...
Back in the 1940s the political scientist C. Herman Pritchett began tallying the votes and opinions ...
The aim of this thesis is to formulate a concept of judicial activism which may be used in the analy...
This Article seeks to examine and compare the judicial behaviors of the five conservative justices o...