This Article on Richard Fallon’s Law and Legitimacy in the Supreme Court focuses on public acceptance of the Supreme Court’s authority, what Fallon calls sociological legitimacy. After setting out Fallon’s accounts of legitimacy and constitutional argumentation, the Article looks at public opinion data and political science scholarship on the extent to which the Court’s decisions affect public acceptance of the Court. It then turns to the normative question of whether, even if the Court’s decisions may undermine its sociological legitimacy, that impact is a legally legitimate factor for the Court to consider. The Article argues that strategic consideration of the Court’s public legitimacy can be an appropriate factor in the Justices’ decisi...
This Article seeks to comprehensively articulate the meaning, role, and importance of truth in court...
It is conventional in research on the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court to rely on a survey quest...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...
This Article on Richard Fallon’s Law and Legitimacy in the Supreme Court focuses on public acceptanc...
Analysis of a Supreme Court opinion ordinarily begins from the premise that the opinion is a transpa...
Convention holds that the Supreme Court, because of its special constitutional role, can confer an e...
This article examines the legitimacy-conferring potential of the U.S. Supreme Court. Legitimacy-conf...
This Article explains the differences between public opinion of the Supreme Court’s performance and ...
Commentators offer the Justices consistent—if unsolicited—advice: tend to the Supreme Court’s instit...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
Bartels and Johnston have recently presented evidence suggesting that the legitimacy of the U.S. Sup...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
After the highly political election cycle in 2016, there has been an increase in the number of chall...
The existing literature on Supreme Court legitimacy suggests that factors such as ideology, politica...
Over the last couple of decades or so, comparative public law scholars have been reporting a dramati...
This Article seeks to comprehensively articulate the meaning, role, and importance of truth in court...
It is conventional in research on the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court to rely on a survey quest...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...
This Article on Richard Fallon’s Law and Legitimacy in the Supreme Court focuses on public acceptanc...
Analysis of a Supreme Court opinion ordinarily begins from the premise that the opinion is a transpa...
Convention holds that the Supreme Court, because of its special constitutional role, can confer an e...
This article examines the legitimacy-conferring potential of the U.S. Supreme Court. Legitimacy-conf...
This Article explains the differences between public opinion of the Supreme Court’s performance and ...
Commentators offer the Justices consistent—if unsolicited—advice: tend to the Supreme Court’s instit...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
Bartels and Johnston have recently presented evidence suggesting that the legitimacy of the U.S. Sup...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
After the highly political election cycle in 2016, there has been an increase in the number of chall...
The existing literature on Supreme Court legitimacy suggests that factors such as ideology, politica...
Over the last couple of decades or so, comparative public law scholars have been reporting a dramati...
This Article seeks to comprehensively articulate the meaning, role, and importance of truth in court...
It is conventional in research on the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court to rely on a survey quest...
Public support for the US Supreme Court has been trending downward for more than a decade. High-prof...