What role do policy preferences play when a judge or any other reader decides what a statute or other legal text means? Most judges think of themselves as doing law, not politics. Yet the observable decisions that judges make often follow patterns that are hard to explain by anything other than policy preferences. Indeed, if one presses the implications of the data too hard, it is likely to be heard as an accusation of bad faith—a claim that the judge or other decision-maker isn\u27t really earnest in trying to separate preference from judgment. This does not advance the discussion, and distracts from the possibility of more interesting explanations. A promising antidote, we believe, lies in empirical study not just of large numbers of judi...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
Agencies continually interpret the statutes they administer. Their interpretations are expressed in ...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
What role do policy preferences play when a judge or any other reader decides what a statute or othe...
What a statutory interpretation opinion interprets may seem given. It is not: this article shows how...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
This Essay questions whether consistency in legal interpretation is truly a manifestation of the inf...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
This article considers theories of “interpretive choice,” which deny that any particular method of i...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Judges interpreting statutes sometimes seem eager to outsource the work. They quote ordinary speaker...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
This article is a response to the law review article cited in its title. It focuses on a corollary ...
Professors Jonathan Macey and Geoffrey Miller claim to have set out to provide a positivist explanat...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
Agencies continually interpret the statutes they administer. Their interpretations are expressed in ...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
What role do policy preferences play when a judge or any other reader decides what a statute or othe...
What a statutory interpretation opinion interprets may seem given. It is not: this article shows how...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
This Essay questions whether consistency in legal interpretation is truly a manifestation of the inf...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
This article considers theories of “interpretive choice,” which deny that any particular method of i...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
Judges interpreting statutes sometimes seem eager to outsource the work. They quote ordinary speaker...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
This article is a response to the law review article cited in its title. It focuses on a corollary ...
Professors Jonathan Macey and Geoffrey Miller claim to have set out to provide a positivist explanat...
This essay argues that Intentionalism\u27s definition of interpretation entails nothing about the le...
Agencies continually interpret the statutes they administer. Their interpretations are expressed in ...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...