In this paper we use a global optimization technique developed by Bai and Perron (1998) to estimate both the number and location of structural breaks in dissenting opinions on the United States Supreme Court. While it has commonly been believed that there has been one regime shift in dissenting opinions on the United States Supreme Court corresponding to the breakdown in the consensual norm in the 1930s or 1940s, we find that there have been three breaks. We then test to see if changes in the leadership of the Supreme Court have had a statistically significant effect on dissent taking the structural breaks as given. This is a more rigorous test of the influence of judicial leadership on consensus than testing leadership dummy variables agai...
We employ machine learning techniques to identify common characteristics and features from cases in ...
Scholars often argue that whereas unanimous rulings should boost public support for court decisions,...
We leverage the institutional features of American courts to evaluate the importance of whistleblowe...
In a previous issue of this journal, Smyth and Narayan (2004) examine structural change in the level...
This article identifies structural breaks in dissenting and single opinions on the High Court of Aus...
The literature on dissent in courts points some factors as causes of reduction or increase in the am...
This paper develops and tests a model of self-interested judicial behavior to explore the phenomenon...
errors are solely the author’s responsibility. From 1940 to the present, the on-the-record consensus...
This analysis seeks to understand the decline of Supreme Court consensual norms often attributed to ...
Despite recent critical interest in legal discourse, few scholars have studied Supreme Court dissent...
This analysis seeks to understand the decline of Supreme Court consensual norms often attributed to ...
In 2013, the Supreme Court showed an unusually high rate of unanimous decisions – the highest, in fa...
This article examines the factors influencing the annual dissent rate on the High Court of Australia...
Scholars have been intrigued by the abrupt change in the rate of nonconsensual opinions that the Sup...
Why do justices author or join separate opinions? Most attempts to address the dynamics of con-curre...
We employ machine learning techniques to identify common characteristics and features from cases in ...
Scholars often argue that whereas unanimous rulings should boost public support for court decisions,...
We leverage the institutional features of American courts to evaluate the importance of whistleblowe...
In a previous issue of this journal, Smyth and Narayan (2004) examine structural change in the level...
This article identifies structural breaks in dissenting and single opinions on the High Court of Aus...
The literature on dissent in courts points some factors as causes of reduction or increase in the am...
This paper develops and tests a model of self-interested judicial behavior to explore the phenomenon...
errors are solely the author’s responsibility. From 1940 to the present, the on-the-record consensus...
This analysis seeks to understand the decline of Supreme Court consensual norms often attributed to ...
Despite recent critical interest in legal discourse, few scholars have studied Supreme Court dissent...
This analysis seeks to understand the decline of Supreme Court consensual norms often attributed to ...
In 2013, the Supreme Court showed an unusually high rate of unanimous decisions – the highest, in fa...
This article examines the factors influencing the annual dissent rate on the High Court of Australia...
Scholars have been intrigued by the abrupt change in the rate of nonconsensual opinions that the Sup...
Why do justices author or join separate opinions? Most attempts to address the dynamics of con-curre...
We employ machine learning techniques to identify common characteristics and features from cases in ...
Scholars often argue that whereas unanimous rulings should boost public support for court decisions,...
We leverage the institutional features of American courts to evaluate the importance of whistleblowe...