Why do societies choose particular institutions of judicial selection and retention? Why do they formally alter those choices? We attempt to address these questions, first, by assessing what we can only call the standard story of judicial selection systems. On this explanation, the initial choice of institutions (and alterations in that choice) comes about through changes in the tide of history, that is, of societies "responding to popular ideas at different historical periods" (Glick and Vines 1973, 40). Finding this story conceptually thin and empirically wanting, we turn to a different explanation. On this account, the creation of and changes in the institutions used to select and retain justices serving on (constitutional) courts of...
State judiciaries are foundational institutions of governance in the United States. They are coequal...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
Scholars who examine judicial independence offer various theories regarding its development. Some ar...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
In Choices we argue that justices are strategic actors who realize that their ability to achieve the...
In pursuing their goals, members of the U.S. Supreme Court are affected by their institutional setti...
Despite the fact that judicial scholars have developed reasonably well-specified models of the votin...
Using a new dataset capturing the ideological positioning of nearly half a million U.S.\ judges and ...
If the mark of a seminal study is the quantity and quality of the progeny it spawns, then Robert A. ...
During the twentieth century, judicial reformers attempting to depoliticize the selection of state c...
We examine the revelation of preferences of justices whose true ideologies are not known when enteri...
Courts of last resort in the American states offer researchers considerable leverage to develop and ...
The Missouri Law Review\u27s title for this symposium rightly recognizes the distinction between jud...
Because agenda setting is one of the most important activities undertaken by Supreme Court justices,...
In this study I provide an empirical analysis of the judicial system. The main emphasis of this stud...
State judiciaries are foundational institutions of governance in the United States. They are coequal...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
Scholars who examine judicial independence offer various theories regarding its development. Some ar...
Assuming that we desire to design formal rules that would maximize the attainment of the aims of cre...
In Choices we argue that justices are strategic actors who realize that their ability to achieve the...
In pursuing their goals, members of the U.S. Supreme Court are affected by their institutional setti...
Despite the fact that judicial scholars have developed reasonably well-specified models of the votin...
Using a new dataset capturing the ideological positioning of nearly half a million U.S.\ judges and ...
If the mark of a seminal study is the quantity and quality of the progeny it spawns, then Robert A. ...
During the twentieth century, judicial reformers attempting to depoliticize the selection of state c...
We examine the revelation of preferences of justices whose true ideologies are not known when enteri...
Courts of last resort in the American states offer researchers considerable leverage to develop and ...
The Missouri Law Review\u27s title for this symposium rightly recognizes the distinction between jud...
Because agenda setting is one of the most important activities undertaken by Supreme Court justices,...
In this study I provide an empirical analysis of the judicial system. The main emphasis of this stud...
State judiciaries are foundational institutions of governance in the United States. They are coequal...
In this Article, I undertake an evaluation of a method of judicial selection known as "merit selecti...
Scholars who examine judicial independence offer various theories regarding its development. Some ar...