Supreme Court decisions may quickly and dramatically change the constitutional landscape, but can certain high-profile cases affect voter turnout? Examining landmark Court decisions throughout the years, such as Lochner, Brown, Roe, and others, this article finds that these remarkably important cases do not often result in increased voter turnout. Surprisingly, many of these decisions have been followed by decreased voter turnout or very marginal voter turnout increases, suggesting that they may often placate rather than energize the electorate. The piece considers both presidential and midterm elections, shedding new light on the intriguing interactions between the Court, politics, and the political process. It also briefly looks at other ...
It has always been a matter of debate if Supreme Court rulings consolidate opposition to an issue or...
A funny thing happened after the Supreme Court decided Bush v. Gore, the controversial December 2000...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
Voting is simple in the United States, right? The process of voting (organizing, running and tabula...
High profile Supreme Court cases have become increasingly commonplace, particularly with the Citizen...
Judges and law professors alike have worried that an avowedly structural approach to constitutional ...
This article will consider the implications of a rare, but conceptually significant, phenomenon in S...
When Supreme Court justices decide a case, they can utilize one of two theories: judicial restraint ...
This article presents a statistical snapshot of voting patterns within the Washington Supreme Court ...
Can Supreme Court rulings change Americans’ policy views? Prior experimental and observational studi...
Critics traditionally portray state Supreme Court elections as low-information events that fail to a...
This Article examines the concept of a “minority Justice,” meaning a Supreme Court Justice appointed...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
This Article, the fourteenth in a series, tabulates and analyzes the voting behavior of the United S...
In this symposium essay, we investigate the effect of economic conditions on the voting behavior of ...
It has always been a matter of debate if Supreme Court rulings consolidate opposition to an issue or...
A funny thing happened after the Supreme Court decided Bush v. Gore, the controversial December 2000...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
Voting is simple in the United States, right? The process of voting (organizing, running and tabula...
High profile Supreme Court cases have become increasingly commonplace, particularly with the Citizen...
Judges and law professors alike have worried that an avowedly structural approach to constitutional ...
This article will consider the implications of a rare, but conceptually significant, phenomenon in S...
When Supreme Court justices decide a case, they can utilize one of two theories: judicial restraint ...
This article presents a statistical snapshot of voting patterns within the Washington Supreme Court ...
Can Supreme Court rulings change Americans’ policy views? Prior experimental and observational studi...
Critics traditionally portray state Supreme Court elections as low-information events that fail to a...
This Article examines the concept of a “minority Justice,” meaning a Supreme Court Justice appointed...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
This Article, the fourteenth in a series, tabulates and analyzes the voting behavior of the United S...
In this symposium essay, we investigate the effect of economic conditions on the voting behavior of ...
It has always been a matter of debate if Supreme Court rulings consolidate opposition to an issue or...
A funny thing happened after the Supreme Court decided Bush v. Gore, the controversial December 2000...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...