Canadian prime ministers appoint judges to the Supreme Court of Canada at their own discretion. This practice has been criticized as providing prime ministers with the ability to appoint judges whose policy preferences are regarded as politically congenial. We examine the Court\u27s judgments in the post-Charter era to discern the apparent policy preferences of the judges. Our results suggest that the policy preferences of judges are not strongly associated with the political party of the prime minister and that their policy preferences shift over time in seemingly unpredictable ways. We discuss the implications of this analysis for possible reforms of the appointments process
Empiricists routinely explain politically sensitive decisions of the U.S. federal courts through the...
This paper analyzes the Supreme Court appointment process over the 10-year period from 2004 through...
We examine the revelation of preferences of justices whose true ideologies are not known when enteri...
Canadian Prime Ministers appoint judges to the Supreme Court of Canada at their own discretion. This...
This paper examines how justices on the Supreme Court of Canada voted in Charter appeals between 200...
This paper examines how justices on the Supreme Court of Canada voted in Charter appeals between 200...
Over the past 25 years, the justices of the Supreme Court of Canada have not exhibited the divergent...
The presence of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Constitution of Canada has transformed the...
The federal government\u27s power to appoint judges has come under increased scrutiny in recent year...
The article investigates whether the new screening system introduced by the federal government in 19...
This study seeks to add to the current understanding of the political nature of the Supreme Court of...
High courts play an important law and policy-making role in most countries. Considerable professiona...
The purpose of this article is to advance some hypotheses about the way the Supreme Court of Canada ...
The foundation upon which accounts of policy-motivated behavior of Supreme Court justices are built ...
This article addresses the allegation that the Supreme Court has been biased in deciding constitutio...
Empiricists routinely explain politically sensitive decisions of the U.S. federal courts through the...
This paper analyzes the Supreme Court appointment process over the 10-year period from 2004 through...
We examine the revelation of preferences of justices whose true ideologies are not known when enteri...
Canadian Prime Ministers appoint judges to the Supreme Court of Canada at their own discretion. This...
This paper examines how justices on the Supreme Court of Canada voted in Charter appeals between 200...
This paper examines how justices on the Supreme Court of Canada voted in Charter appeals between 200...
Over the past 25 years, the justices of the Supreme Court of Canada have not exhibited the divergent...
The presence of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Constitution of Canada has transformed the...
The federal government\u27s power to appoint judges has come under increased scrutiny in recent year...
The article investigates whether the new screening system introduced by the federal government in 19...
This study seeks to add to the current understanding of the political nature of the Supreme Court of...
High courts play an important law and policy-making role in most countries. Considerable professiona...
The purpose of this article is to advance some hypotheses about the way the Supreme Court of Canada ...
The foundation upon which accounts of policy-motivated behavior of Supreme Court justices are built ...
This article addresses the allegation that the Supreme Court has been biased in deciding constitutio...
Empiricists routinely explain politically sensitive decisions of the U.S. federal courts through the...
This paper analyzes the Supreme Court appointment process over the 10-year period from 2004 through...
We examine the revelation of preferences of justices whose true ideologies are not known when enteri...