This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing their opinions for specific audiences. Black, Owens, Wedeking, and Wohlfarth suggest justices keep lower federal courts, state governments, federal bureaucratic agencies, and the public in mind when crafting decisions, particularly to ensure compliance with the decision and avoid non-compliance. The Article identifies opinion clarity as a means of ensuring lower federal courts will follow precedent, as well as a way for smaller and less sophisticated bureaucratic agencies to avoid shirking the Court’s rulings. The Article concludes judicial clarity is only one of an arsenal of rhetorical devices used by the Supreme Court justices, and further eva...
The role of the judiciary, Chief Justice Marshall famously advised, is “to say what the law is.” Yet...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...
Students of linguistics and psychology demonstrate that word choices people make convey information ...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
The 50 state supreme courts issue more than 5,000 published opinions each year. These opinions are v...
Reviewing Ryan C. Black, Tim R. Johnson, and Justin Wedeking, Oral Arguments and Coalition Formation...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
This Article analyses the Supreme Court’s need to tout its unanimous decisions in light of public pe...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
The manner in which political institutions convey their policy outcomes can have important implicati...
Our empirical investigation focuses on two areas. First, we are interested in the quality of the ora...
In rare instances, a Supreme Court justice may elect to call attention to his or her displeasure wit...
The role of the judiciary, Chief Justice Marshall famously advised, is “to say what the law is.” Yet...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...
Students of linguistics and psychology demonstrate that word choices people make convey information ...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
The 50 state supreme courts issue more than 5,000 published opinions each year. These opinions are v...
Reviewing Ryan C. Black, Tim R. Johnson, and Justin Wedeking, Oral Arguments and Coalition Formation...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
This Article analyses the Supreme Court’s need to tout its unanimous decisions in light of public pe...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
I spend much of my time dealing with Supreme Court opinions. Usually, I download and read them the d...
The manner in which political institutions convey their policy outcomes can have important implicati...
Our empirical investigation focuses on two areas. First, we are interested in the quality of the ora...
In rare instances, a Supreme Court justice may elect to call attention to his or her displeasure wit...
The role of the judiciary, Chief Justice Marshall famously advised, is “to say what the law is.” Yet...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...
Students of linguistics and psychology demonstrate that word choices people make convey information ...