This article uses an original database of confirmation hearing dialogue to examine how the Senate Judiciary Committee’s role in Supreme Court confirmations has changed over time, with particular attention paid to the 1939–2010 era. During this period, several notable developments took place, including a rise in the number of hearing comments, increased attention to nominees’ views of judicial decisions, an expansion of the scope of issues addressed, and the equalization of questioning between majority and minority party senators. We demonstrate that these changes were shaped by both endogenous and exogenous factors to promote the legitimization of the Judiciary Committee’s role in the confirmation process and to foster the instrumental goal...
The confirmation process for Supreme Court justices is examined as a form of indirect constitutional...
In this article, I investigate why and how senators participate in the hearings to advance their pol...
While the U.S. Senate is now unable to make use of the filibuster to delay judicial nominees to fede...
This article uses an original database of confirmation hearing dialogue to examine how the Senate Ju...
ABSTRACT In 1816, the Senate created the Committee on the Judiciary to assist in its task of providi...
This dissertation examines Senate influence on United States Supreme Court nominations during five e...
This paper examines the questions asked and answers given by every Supreme Court nominee who has app...
This Article offers the first empirical analysis of the Senate’s role in constraining presidents’ ch...
The contentiousness of Senate voting on Supreme Court nominations increased dramatically from 1937 t...
In the midst of the contentious confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
The five Supreme Court nominations between 2005 and 2010 brought renewed attention to the Senate’s r...
Political and partisan battles over nominees to the federal courts of appeal have reached unpreceden...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
The interpretive or judicial philosophies of Supreme Court Justices can be thought of as “packages o...
The confirmation process for Supreme Court justices is examined as a form of indirect constitutional...
In this article, I investigate why and how senators participate in the hearings to advance their pol...
While the U.S. Senate is now unable to make use of the filibuster to delay judicial nominees to fede...
This article uses an original database of confirmation hearing dialogue to examine how the Senate Ju...
ABSTRACT In 1816, the Senate created the Committee on the Judiciary to assist in its task of providi...
This dissertation examines Senate influence on United States Supreme Court nominations during five e...
This paper examines the questions asked and answers given by every Supreme Court nominee who has app...
This Article offers the first empirical analysis of the Senate’s role in constraining presidents’ ch...
The contentiousness of Senate voting on Supreme Court nominations increased dramatically from 1937 t...
In the midst of the contentious confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
The five Supreme Court nominations between 2005 and 2010 brought renewed attention to the Senate’s r...
Political and partisan battles over nominees to the federal courts of appeal have reached unpreceden...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
The interpretive or judicial philosophies of Supreme Court Justices can be thought of as “packages o...
The confirmation process for Supreme Court justices is examined as a form of indirect constitutional...
In this article, I investigate why and how senators participate in the hearings to advance their pol...
While the U.S. Senate is now unable to make use of the filibuster to delay judicial nominees to fede...