Not too many years ago, scholars could reasonably speak of the U.S. Supreme Court as being among the most activist in American history. Both empirical and normative scholarship was driven by the sense of a Court that was aggressive in the assertion of its own supremacy and active in the exercise of the power of judicial review. The Court under Chief Justice John Roberts cannot be viewed in the same way. The Roberts Court has issued its share of controversial constitutional decisions, but a rarely observed but important feature of the Roberts Court is its unusual restraint in the exercise of judicial review. By some measures, in fact, the Roberts Court can thus far be called the least activist Supreme Court in history. This Article demo...
This thesis studies whether the Roberts Court has been hearing more important issues than the Warren...
The Article argues that the polarization in the appointments process for the United States Supreme C...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
Not too many years ago, scholars could reasonably speak of the U.S. Supreme Court as being among the...
Is the Roberts Court especially activist or, depending on your preference, especially lacking in jud...
In The Roberts Court at Age Three, Dean Erwin Chemerinsky offers a preliminary assessment of the Rob...
Over twenty years ago, my Foreword on the Supreme Court’s October 1988 Term titled The Vanishing Con...
There has been much debate about the United States Supreme Court and the importance of selecting the...
This paper is an empirical examination of the recently ended 2005 Supreme Court term. The paper, in ...
At the sprightly age of 57 and less than seven years into his term as chief justice, John Roberts lo...
Since the appointment of Chief Justice G. Roberts to the U.S. Supreme Court, political scientists an...
After eleven years, the longest period in Supreme Court history with no change in membership, the Ro...
If there is anything as strongly associated in the public mind with Chief Justice John Roberts as hi...
This paper attempts to quantify one of the most deeply contested terms in constitutional law: “judic...
The power of judicial review of federal statutes in American constitutional history has the mystique...
This thesis studies whether the Roberts Court has been hearing more important issues than the Warren...
The Article argues that the polarization in the appointments process for the United States Supreme C...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
Not too many years ago, scholars could reasonably speak of the U.S. Supreme Court as being among the...
Is the Roberts Court especially activist or, depending on your preference, especially lacking in jud...
In The Roberts Court at Age Three, Dean Erwin Chemerinsky offers a preliminary assessment of the Rob...
Over twenty years ago, my Foreword on the Supreme Court’s October 1988 Term titled The Vanishing Con...
There has been much debate about the United States Supreme Court and the importance of selecting the...
This paper is an empirical examination of the recently ended 2005 Supreme Court term. The paper, in ...
At the sprightly age of 57 and less than seven years into his term as chief justice, John Roberts lo...
Since the appointment of Chief Justice G. Roberts to the U.S. Supreme Court, political scientists an...
After eleven years, the longest period in Supreme Court history with no change in membership, the Ro...
If there is anything as strongly associated in the public mind with Chief Justice John Roberts as hi...
This paper attempts to quantify one of the most deeply contested terms in constitutional law: “judic...
The power of judicial review of federal statutes in American constitutional history has the mystique...
This thesis studies whether the Roberts Court has been hearing more important issues than the Warren...
The Article argues that the polarization in the appointments process for the United States Supreme C...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...