Empirical studies have been mixed about whether the political environment influences a justice's decision to retire from the U.S. Supreme Court. Studies have tended to presume that the influence of the political environment is uniform, such that justices are more likely to retire during more favorable environments and less likely to retire during less favorable environments. But this article provides theory and evidence that justices are more likely to time their retirements to only one particular favorable political environment: a favorable political environment following an unfavorable political environment. Results of an analysis of Supreme Court justices' retirement decisions from 1962 to 2010 suggest that justices have pursued this del...
For at least three decades now, those charged with nominating and confirming justices to the U.S. Su...
This Article compares the years of experience that preceded each Justice‘s appointment to the United...
Research indicates that senators evaluate U.S. Supreme Court nominations on two ideological dimensio...
As the rampant speculation preceding Justice Kennedy\u27s retirement made clear, it is difficult to ...
As the rampant speculation preceding Justice Kennedy’s retirement made clear, it is difficult to pre...
Previous research has identified strategic behavior in the nomination, confirmation, and retirement ...
The influence of U.S. Supreme Court majority opinions depends critically on how these opinions are r...
At some point in their careers all state court justices are faced with the decision to leave the ben...
If judges are politically strategic, they may try to retire at times that maximize the chances that ...
When President George W. Bush declared that his Supreme Court nominee, Harriet E. Miers, was "not go...
Over the past 100 years Supreme Court Justices are retiring at a much higher rate than their predece...
Dataset includes 761 justices who served in the Supreme Courts of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, ...
At its core, this project involves important questions concerning the allocation of political power....
This Article examines the relationship between the productivity of the U.S. Supreme Court and the ag...
Separation-of-powers models of judicial decision making traditionally focus on the U.S. Supreme Cour...
For at least three decades now, those charged with nominating and confirming justices to the U.S. Su...
This Article compares the years of experience that preceded each Justice‘s appointment to the United...
Research indicates that senators evaluate U.S. Supreme Court nominations on two ideological dimensio...
As the rampant speculation preceding Justice Kennedy\u27s retirement made clear, it is difficult to ...
As the rampant speculation preceding Justice Kennedy’s retirement made clear, it is difficult to pre...
Previous research has identified strategic behavior in the nomination, confirmation, and retirement ...
The influence of U.S. Supreme Court majority opinions depends critically on how these opinions are r...
At some point in their careers all state court justices are faced with the decision to leave the ben...
If judges are politically strategic, they may try to retire at times that maximize the chances that ...
When President George W. Bush declared that his Supreme Court nominee, Harriet E. Miers, was "not go...
Over the past 100 years Supreme Court Justices are retiring at a much higher rate than their predece...
Dataset includes 761 justices who served in the Supreme Courts of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, ...
At its core, this project involves important questions concerning the allocation of political power....
This Article examines the relationship between the productivity of the U.S. Supreme Court and the ag...
Separation-of-powers models of judicial decision making traditionally focus on the U.S. Supreme Cour...
For at least three decades now, those charged with nominating and confirming justices to the U.S. Su...
This Article compares the years of experience that preceded each Justice‘s appointment to the United...
Research indicates that senators evaluate U.S. Supreme Court nominations on two ideological dimensio...