I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the day that they are announced by the Court. I edit them for my casebook and teach them to my students. I write about them, lecture about them, and litigate about them. My focus, like I am sure most everyone\u27s, is functional: I try to discern the holding, appraise the reasoning, ascertain the implications, and evaluate the decision\u27s desirability. Increasingly, though, I have begun to think that this functional approach is overlooking a crucial aspect of Supreme Court decisions: their rhetoric. I use rhetoric here, not in the popular pejorative sense, but in the classical meaning of the word. The Supreme Court\u27s opinions are rhetoric in ...
What are the legitimate types of argument in constitutional debate? This is a perennial question in ...
This project considers how narrative is employed as a rhetorical strategy to materially alter the la...
In the last forty-five years, the United States Supreme Court’s jurisprudence through the lens of cl...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
Perhaps nowhere in American life is the intersection of language, argumentation, and politics more i...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
The replacement of traditional seriatim opinions with an "Opinion of the Court," offers what initial...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2016. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: Arthur ...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
All judges legitimize their decisions in writing, but US Supreme Court justices depend on public acc...
What are the legitimate types of argument in constitutional debate? This is a perennial question in ...
This project considers how narrative is employed as a rhetorical strategy to materially alter the la...
In the last forty-five years, the United States Supreme Court’s jurisprudence through the lens of cl...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
Perhaps nowhere in American life is the intersection of language, argumentation, and politics more i...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
The replacement of traditional seriatim opinions with an "Opinion of the Court," offers what initial...
Rhetorical scholars have long advocated for the study of legal discourse because of the “centrality ...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2016. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: Arthur ...
Though constitutional doctrine is famously unpredictable, Supreme Court Justices often imbue their c...
All judges legitimize their decisions in writing, but US Supreme Court justices depend on public acc...
What are the legitimate types of argument in constitutional debate? This is a perennial question in ...
This project considers how narrative is employed as a rhetorical strategy to materially alter the la...
In the last forty-five years, the United States Supreme Court’s jurisprudence through the lens of cl...