The Supreme Court of the United States has during a long time held an important role in forming the application of American public policy. This study aims to answer the question of what ideological conflict dimensions is present in the context of interest groups attempting to influence the court using amicus curiae briefs. Also, it examines if the participation of interest groups is part of a pattern over several cases or rather isolated to individual issues. Although there exists earlier research concerned with the influence of interest groups on the Supreme Court, the ideological dimensions to their activities has been left unexplored. This study aims to remedy that shortcoming. The conflict of petitioner against respondent is used as an ...
In contrast to the standard conception of a U.S. Supreme Court striving to produce ideologically opt...
While prior work provides a good deal of information on the aggregate patterns of organized interest...
Though there is an extensive literature focused on the participation and efficacy of interest group ...
In this article, we analyze how pluralistic, competitive, and conflictual interest group amicus curi...
Why do interest groups participate in state courts of last resort by filing amicus curiae briefs? A...
In recent decades, the Supreme Court has been seen as increasingly as a political as well as a legal...
Amicus curiae participation is a staple of interest group activity in the U.S. Supreme Court. While ...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
While there has been a substantial body of research on interest group activity in U.S. federal court...
In the process of case selection in the U.S. Supreme Court, lawyers try to secure space on the justi...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
The purpose of this research is to analyze and develop a narrative describing the relationships betw...
The Supreme Court of the United States is analyzed in the search of political influence. Influences ...
The so-called "Federalism Revolution " of the Rehnquist Court has sparked debate regarding...
For nearly five decades, scholars have explored interest group involve-ment in courts, with their in...
In contrast to the standard conception of a U.S. Supreme Court striving to produce ideologically opt...
While prior work provides a good deal of information on the aggregate patterns of organized interest...
Though there is an extensive literature focused on the participation and efficacy of interest group ...
In this article, we analyze how pluralistic, competitive, and conflictual interest group amicus curi...
Why do interest groups participate in state courts of last resort by filing amicus curiae briefs? A...
In recent decades, the Supreme Court has been seen as increasingly as a political as well as a legal...
Amicus curiae participation is a staple of interest group activity in the U.S. Supreme Court. While ...
Most scholarship on Supreme Court decision making assumes that justices’ ideological preferences exh...
While there has been a substantial body of research on interest group activity in U.S. federal court...
In the process of case selection in the U.S. Supreme Court, lawyers try to secure space on the justi...
Conventional wisdom says that individuals’ ideological preferences do not influence Supreme Court le...
The purpose of this research is to analyze and develop a narrative describing the relationships betw...
The Supreme Court of the United States is analyzed in the search of political influence. Influences ...
The so-called "Federalism Revolution " of the Rehnquist Court has sparked debate regarding...
For nearly five decades, scholars have explored interest group involve-ment in courts, with their in...
In contrast to the standard conception of a U.S. Supreme Court striving to produce ideologically opt...
While prior work provides a good deal of information on the aggregate patterns of organized interest...
Though there is an extensive literature focused on the participation and efficacy of interest group ...