Per curiam--literally translated from Latin to by the court -is defined by Black\u27s Law Dictionary as [a]n opinion handed down by an appellate court without identifying the individual judge who wrote the opinion. Accordingly the author of a per curiam opinion is meant to be institutional rather than individual, attributable to the court as an entity rather than to a single judge The United States Supreme Court issues a significant number of per curiam dispositions each Term. In the first six years of Chief Justice John Roberts’ tenure, almost nine percent of the Court full opinions were per curiams. The prevalence of issuing unattributed opinions raises questions of its impact on judicial accountability and the development of the law T...
This study is an empirical examination of a set of the Supreme Court's per curiam rulings issued aft...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...
Per curiam--literally translated from Latin to by the court -is defined by Black\u27s Law Dictionar...
I. Introduction II. The History of the Per Curiam Opinion as a Form of Judicial Expression ... A. Th...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2016. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: Arthur ...
The link between courts and the public is the written word. With rare exceptions, it is through judi...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
The inherent ambiguity of language vests in the United States Supreme Court considerable power to sh...
Controversies involving the United States Supreme Court generally center on the content of Court’s d...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
Although the Supreme Court is a singular institution within the American judiciary, it remains recog...
The role of the judiciary, Chief Justice Marshall famously advised, is “to say what the law is.” Yet...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
When the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision on the fate of the Affordable Care Act on J...
This study is an empirical examination of a set of the Supreme Court's per curiam rulings issued aft...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...
Per curiam--literally translated from Latin to by the court -is defined by Black\u27s Law Dictionar...
I. Introduction II. The History of the Per Curiam Opinion as a Form of Judicial Expression ... A. Th...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2016. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: Arthur ...
The link between courts and the public is the written word. With rare exceptions, it is through judi...
What are the causes and consequences of opinion language on the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals? Much...
The inherent ambiguity of language vests in the United States Supreme Court considerable power to sh...
Controversies involving the United States Supreme Court generally center on the content of Court’s d...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
Although the Supreme Court is a singular institution within the American judiciary, it remains recog...
The role of the judiciary, Chief Justice Marshall famously advised, is “to say what the law is.” Yet...
Although the individual Justices of the Supreme Court frequently speak to the public, the Court as a...
When the Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision on the fate of the Affordable Care Act on J...
This study is an empirical examination of a set of the Supreme Court's per curiam rulings issued aft...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...