While the Supreme Court’s legitimacy is generally considered essential to its influence, scholars continue to debate whether the Court’s decisions affect individuals’ assessments of it. The last week of the 2013 term provides an unusual opportunity to evaluate these issues because the Court made a conservative decision concerning the Voting Rights Act only one day before it made a liberal one about same-sex marriage. We utilize original panel data of individuals’ views throughout this period, including a wave collected on the day between the two decisions, to investigate the links among decisions and legitimacy. We find that diffuse support for the Court is sensitive to decisions in these two salient cases conditional on individuals’ ideolo...
We construct the complete network of 30,288 majority opinions written by the U.S. Supreme Court and ...
We offer a theory in which the U.S. Supreme Court drives aggregate responses to its decisions by sig...
Hyperbole is the common response in the wake of any Supreme Court decision, but which cases have a l...
The 2012 challenge to the Affordable Care Act was an unusual opportunity for people to form or reass...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
Is support for the U.S. Supreme Court stable over time? Recent studies present conflicting evidence ...
Bartels and Johnston have recently presented evidence suggesting that the legitimacy of the U.S. Sup...
The public perceives the Supreme Court to be a legal institution, less partisan than its counterpart...
This paper offers a first attempt to develop and assess the competing predictions of the thermostati...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Contemporary U.S. Supreme Court nominations are unavoidably and inevitably political. Although obser...
Conventional wisdom suggests that judicial legitimacy should be relatively unaffected by satisfactio...
Experimental research has yielded findings that are largely optimistic about the Court’s powers to m...
Recent decisions by the US Supreme Court such as the overturning of Roe. vs Wade have raised questio...
After the highly political election cycle in 2016, there has been an increase in the number of chall...
We construct the complete network of 30,288 majority opinions written by the U.S. Supreme Court and ...
We offer a theory in which the U.S. Supreme Court drives aggregate responses to its decisions by sig...
Hyperbole is the common response in the wake of any Supreme Court decision, but which cases have a l...
The 2012 challenge to the Affordable Care Act was an unusual opportunity for people to form or reass...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
Is support for the U.S. Supreme Court stable over time? Recent studies present conflicting evidence ...
Bartels and Johnston have recently presented evidence suggesting that the legitimacy of the U.S. Sup...
The public perceives the Supreme Court to be a legal institution, less partisan than its counterpart...
This paper offers a first attempt to develop and assess the competing predictions of the thermostati...
With competing assumptions and alternative empirical models, scholars have come to rather different ...
Contemporary U.S. Supreme Court nominations are unavoidably and inevitably political. Although obser...
Conventional wisdom suggests that judicial legitimacy should be relatively unaffected by satisfactio...
Experimental research has yielded findings that are largely optimistic about the Court’s powers to m...
Recent decisions by the US Supreme Court such as the overturning of Roe. vs Wade have raised questio...
After the highly political election cycle in 2016, there has been an increase in the number of chall...
We construct the complete network of 30,288 majority opinions written by the U.S. Supreme Court and ...
We offer a theory in which the U.S. Supreme Court drives aggregate responses to its decisions by sig...
Hyperbole is the common response in the wake of any Supreme Court decision, but which cases have a l...