In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning the majority opinion. In this article, we investigate whether this “assignment power” affects outcomes on threejudge panels in the U.S. federal circuit courts. To do so, we gather novel data on all circuit court cases published between 1993 and 2007, identifying the judge with primary opinion-assignment responsibility in each one. Under circuit rules, the same judge may have the assignment power on one panel and not on the next, depending on the composition of each panel and the relative seniority of its members. Exploiting between- and within-circuit variation in institutional procedures that determine the assignment power, we estimate that...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
This Essay explores the instrumental and normative considerations that prompt judges to publish sepa...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
This article investigates two issues unexplored in studies of the relationship between panel composi...
Studies of the the U.S. Courts of Appeals increasingly have moved beyond studying the voting behavio...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
Abstract: This article considers the justification for using panels of judges to make decisions in c...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
Recent research has shown that judges on panels decide cases differently than they do individually. ...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
This Essay explores the instrumental and normative considerations that prompt judges to publish sepa...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
This article investigates two issues unexplored in studies of the relationship between panel composi...
Studies of the the U.S. Courts of Appeals increasingly have moved beyond studying the voting behavio...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
It is common knowledge that the federal courts of appeals typically hear cases in panels of three ju...
Abstract: This article considers the justification for using panels of judges to make decisions in c...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
Recent research has shown that judges on panels decide cases differently than they do individually. ...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
In appellate adjudication, decisions are rendered by a multimember court as a collective entity, not...
This Essay explores the instrumental and normative considerations that prompt judges to publish sepa...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...