This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint by analyzing the question of when, if ever, has judicial self-restraint thrived in the federal courts. Its central aim is to shed historicizing light on the trajectory of judicial activism by imaginatively rifling through an array of canonical and somewhat-less-than-canonical empirical identification strategies. Two conclusions follow from the inquiry. First, I find that the available data on the historical trajectory of judicial restraint are surprisingly poor, and it is necessary to offer any judgment about the historical path of judicial activism with great caution. Second, although the empirical record is fragmentary, some common points e...
The concept of judicial independence has become the sine qua non of the judicial craft. This dissert...
In this Article, I advance a limited defense of judicial activism by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts...
This paper attempts to quantify one of the most deeply contested terms in constitutional law: “judic...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
Richard Posner\u27s version of judicial self-restraint implies that individual Justices who embrace ...
Many legal scholars believe that judges should not be activists. But exactly what does it mean for...
Judicial self-restraint, once a rallying cry for judges and law professors, has fallen on evil days....
This article is a revised version of the author\u27s chapter in the forthcoming book, S. Halpern & C...
This essay examines the intellectual history of the idea of judicial restraint, starting with the ea...
The tendency of legal discourse to obscure the processes by which social and political forces shape ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
While few people would question the authority of the courts to exercise the power of judicial review...
Allegations of voting on partisan or political lines has become a regular feature of discussions on ...
Part of Symposium: The Rehnquist Court in Empirical and Statistical Retrospectiv
The concept of judicial independence has become the sine qua non of the judicial craft. This dissert...
In this Article, I advance a limited defense of judicial activism by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts...
This paper attempts to quantify one of the most deeply contested terms in constitutional law: “judic...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner\u27s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restrai...
This Essay responds to Judge Posner’s Jorde Symposium Essay The Rise and Fall of Judicial Restraint ...
Richard Posner\u27s version of judicial self-restraint implies that individual Justices who embrace ...
Many legal scholars believe that judges should not be activists. But exactly what does it mean for...
Judicial self-restraint, once a rallying cry for judges and law professors, has fallen on evil days....
This article is a revised version of the author\u27s chapter in the forthcoming book, S. Halpern & C...
This essay examines the intellectual history of the idea of judicial restraint, starting with the ea...
The tendency of legal discourse to obscure the processes by which social and political forces shape ...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.Empirical scholarship about judicial activism h...
While few people would question the authority of the courts to exercise the power of judicial review...
Allegations of voting on partisan or political lines has become a regular feature of discussions on ...
Part of Symposium: The Rehnquist Court in Empirical and Statistical Retrospectiv
The concept of judicial independence has become the sine qua non of the judicial craft. This dissert...
In this Article, I advance a limited defense of judicial activism by the Burger and Rehnquist Courts...
This paper attempts to quantify one of the most deeply contested terms in constitutional law: “judic...