Supreme Court precedent is a topic of perennial prominence. The Court overruled or severely limited multiple precedents last year, just as it did the year before that. Because of our widely repeated norm of stare decisis, every overruling is criticized. Scholars have then debated whether the Court needs a stronger norm of stare decisis, so that it overrules fewer cases. This focus is misguided. Rather than worrying about which cases will be cast aside, we should pay more attention to those precedents that are left standing in place. Many of the Court’s questionable precedents nonetheless go unquestioned. The real problem is not that the Court overrules too much, but that it overrules without a theory that explains why it overrules so little...
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Supreme Court justices have fundamentally competing perspectives regarding the best approach to cons...
This Article, a contribution to a symposium on constitutional foundations, maintains that an unappre...
Supreme Court precedent is a topic of perennial prominence. The Court overruled or severely limited ...
The Supreme Court follows the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, of which dictates that the Court must follo...
The scope of Supreme Court precedent is capacious. Justices of the Court commonly defer to sweeping ...
The rule of stare decisis creates a presumption that a court’s ruling on a legal question remains bi...
Stare decisis, the rule that judicial precedents should be followed, has been considered by American...
The principle of stare decisis in United States courts appears in two aspects – the courts of lower ...
Despite the encroachment of legislation on matters that used to lie within the province of the commo...
As Randy Barnett, a Professor of Law at Georgetown Law, stated, “how and when precedent should be re...
In the United States Supreme Court, the concept of stare decisis operates as both metadoctrine and d...
Stare decisis is an integral, accepted principle of American and common-law jurisprudence. The idea ...
Studies of policy making by courts need to examine the actual policy adopted in the majority opinion...
The decision to overrule precedent, we argue, results from the justices’ pursuit of their policy pre...
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Supreme Court justices have fundamentally competing perspectives regarding the best approach to cons...
This Article, a contribution to a symposium on constitutional foundations, maintains that an unappre...
Supreme Court precedent is a topic of perennial prominence. The Court overruled or severely limited ...
The Supreme Court follows the Doctrine of Stare Decisis, of which dictates that the Court must follo...
The scope of Supreme Court precedent is capacious. Justices of the Court commonly defer to sweeping ...
The rule of stare decisis creates a presumption that a court’s ruling on a legal question remains bi...
Stare decisis, the rule that judicial precedents should be followed, has been considered by American...
The principle of stare decisis in United States courts appears in two aspects – the courts of lower ...
Despite the encroachment of legislation on matters that used to lie within the province of the commo...
As Randy Barnett, a Professor of Law at Georgetown Law, stated, “how and when precedent should be re...
In the United States Supreme Court, the concept of stare decisis operates as both metadoctrine and d...
Stare decisis is an integral, accepted principle of American and common-law jurisprudence. The idea ...
Studies of policy making by courts need to examine the actual policy adopted in the majority opinion...
The decision to overrule precedent, we argue, results from the justices’ pursuit of their policy pre...
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Supreme Court justices have fundamentally competing perspectives regarding the best approach to cons...
This Article, a contribution to a symposium on constitutional foundations, maintains that an unappre...