I examine the impact federal appellate courts have on state policy diffusion through the use of computational text analysis. Using a dyadic framework, I model the impact courts have on the decision to adopt a policy and, if adopted, how much text to borrow directly from another state's preexisting law. A court decision ruling a statute unconstitutional can generate up to a 28% relative reduction in the probability of adoption, and a ruling of constitutionality can more than double the amount of borrowed text. These findings shed light on how states learn from one another
Constitutional borrowing comes in different forms. Judges may consider decisions reached by their co...
A comparative approach to policy diffusion work has recently yielded new and interesting results, as...
The CITE-IT project employs information technologies in innovative ways to investigate the developme...
This paper proposes a new approach to investigating the substance of lawmaking. Only a very small pr...
What happens to a bill once signed into law? While many details of the legislative process have been...
Why make the same mistakes as those who have gone before you? In new research into state lawmaking, ...
I examine the relationship between judicial federalism and state-level representation. I develop a f...
We offer a theory in which the U.S. Supreme Court drives aggregate responses to its decisions by sig...
The examination of the interaction between the institutions in American state politics has long suff...
Traditional studies of policy diffusion amongst states are deficient because they do not consider th...
This archive contains data and statistical code to replicate the analyses performed in the paper. Th...
Separation-of-powers models of judicial decision making traditionally focus on the U.S. Supreme Cour...
This article explores the diffusion of criminal justice policy in the American states. Drawing on po...
In recent years, the legal academy has experienced a surge of interest in quantitative empirical ana...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
Constitutional borrowing comes in different forms. Judges may consider decisions reached by their co...
A comparative approach to policy diffusion work has recently yielded new and interesting results, as...
The CITE-IT project employs information technologies in innovative ways to investigate the developme...
This paper proposes a new approach to investigating the substance of lawmaking. Only a very small pr...
What happens to a bill once signed into law? While many details of the legislative process have been...
Why make the same mistakes as those who have gone before you? In new research into state lawmaking, ...
I examine the relationship between judicial federalism and state-level representation. I develop a f...
We offer a theory in which the U.S. Supreme Court drives aggregate responses to its decisions by sig...
The examination of the interaction between the institutions in American state politics has long suff...
Traditional studies of policy diffusion amongst states are deficient because they do not consider th...
This archive contains data and statistical code to replicate the analyses performed in the paper. Th...
Separation-of-powers models of judicial decision making traditionally focus on the U.S. Supreme Cour...
This article explores the diffusion of criminal justice policy in the American states. Drawing on po...
In recent years, the legal academy has experienced a surge of interest in quantitative empirical ana...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
Constitutional borrowing comes in different forms. Judges may consider decisions reached by their co...
A comparative approach to policy diffusion work has recently yielded new and interesting results, as...
The CITE-IT project employs information technologies in innovative ways to investigate the developme...