Should a strategic Justice assemble a broader coalition for the majority opinion than is necessary, even if that means accommodating changes that move the opinion away from the author’s ideal holding? If the author’s objective is to durably move the law to his or her ideal holding, the conventional answer is no, because there is a cost and no corresponding benefit. We consider whether attracting a broad majority coalition can placate future courts. Controlling for the size of the coalition, we find that cases with ideologically narrow coalitions are more likely to be treated negatively by later courts. Specifically, adding either ideological breadth or a new member to the majority coalition results in an opinion that is less likely to be ov...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...
Should a strategic Justice assemble a broader coalition for the majority opinion than is necessary, ...
The past year has seen major decisions by the Supreme Court on gay marriage and Obamacare. But what ...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
We apply a fallback model of coalition formation to decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court, focusing on...
In this Article, Professors Edelman and Sherry use a probabilistic model to explore the process of c...
How can we assess bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Do authorship and opin-ion assignment a...
Forming a coalition on a multi-judge panel involves an inherent trade-off between coalition maximiza...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
This Article examines the profound role that ideological cohesion plays in explaining the Supreme Co...
Studies of reasoning by majority and minority members show that group members in the majority think ...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
The majority opinion is the main vehicle for policy-making for state and federal courts. Longer opin...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...
Should a strategic Justice assemble a broader coalition for the majority opinion than is necessary, ...
The past year has seen major decisions by the Supreme Court on gay marriage and Obamacare. But what ...
Conventional arguments identify either the median justice or the opinion author as the most influent...
We apply a fallback model of coalition formation to decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court, focusing on...
In this Article, Professors Edelman and Sherry use a probabilistic model to explore the process of c...
How can we assess bargaining power within the Supreme Court? Do authorship and opin-ion assignment a...
Forming a coalition on a multi-judge panel involves an inherent trade-off between coalition maximiza...
This dissertation advances research on the relationship between U.S. Supreme Court justices’ concern...
This Article examines the profound role that ideological cohesion plays in explaining the Supreme Co...
Studies of reasoning by majority and minority members show that group members in the majority think ...
This Article evaluates different rhetorical strategies Supreme Court justices employ in writing thei...
The majority opinion is the main vehicle for policy-making for state and federal courts. Longer opin...
Modern Supreme Court opinions are too long. They are too fractured. And they often lack clarity. Sep...
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assig...
The Supreme Court\u27s growing tendency to resort to plurality opinions has produced substantial u...