The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrutiny. Similarly, and separately, recent commentary has focused on the disparate approaches the Court has taken to resolving cases on its (historically small) docket. In this Essay we draw these two lines of inquiry together to argue that the Court’s case selection should align with its approach to constitutional adjudication. In doing so, we discuss four modes of constitutional decisionmaking and then examine the interplay between those modes, the Court’s management of its docket, and its sense of institutional role. The Court, we argue, has neither settled on one approach to constitutional adjudication nor applied the different modes in any s...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
This short Essay is the first to analyze the Court’s recent emer-gency-docket experiments and discus...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has decided fewer cases than at any other time in i...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
This chapter, an invited contribution to a compendium on comparative constitutional law, argues that...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has decided fewer cases than at any other time in i...
In this Article, we offer a fuller jurisprudential analysis of the gatekeeping choices that the Just...
Over the past sixty years, the size of the Supreme Court’s docket has varied tremendously, growing a...
Over the past sixty years, the size of the Supreme Court’s docket has varied tremendously, growing a...
Controversies involving the United States Supreme Court generally center on the content of Court’s d...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
This short Essay is the first to analyze the Court’s recent emer-gency-docket experiments and discus...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has decided fewer cases than at any other time in i...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
The Supreme Court’s workload and its method for selecting cases have drawn increasing critical scrut...
This chapter, an invited contribution to a compendium on comparative constitutional law, argues that...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has decided fewer cases than at any other time in i...
In this Article, we offer a fuller jurisprudential analysis of the gatekeeping choices that the Just...
Over the past sixty years, the size of the Supreme Court’s docket has varied tremendously, growing a...
Over the past sixty years, the size of the Supreme Court’s docket has varied tremendously, growing a...
Controversies involving the United States Supreme Court generally center on the content of Court’s d...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
Drawing on data from every Supreme Court Term between 1940 and 2017, this Article revisits, updates,...
This short Essay is the first to analyze the Court’s recent emer-gency-docket experiments and discus...
In recent years, the United States Supreme Court has decided fewer cases than at any other time in i...