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Full-Text Articles in Judges
Administrative Judges' Role In Developing Social Policy, Charles H. Koch Jr.
Administrative Judges' Role In Developing Social Policy, Charles H. Koch Jr.
Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Ideological Cohesion And Precedent (Or Why The Court Only Cares About Precedent When Most Justices Agree With Each Other), Neal Devins
Faculty Publications
This Article examines the profound role that ideological cohesion plays in explaining the Supreme Court's willingness to advance a coherent vision of the law - either by overruling precedents inconsistent with that vision or by establishing rule-like precedents intended to bind the Supreme Court and lower courts in subsequent cases. Through case studies of the New Deal, Warren, and Rehnquist Courts, this Article calls attention to key differences between Courts in which five or more Justices pursue the same substantive objectives and Courts which lack a dominant voting block. In particular, when five or more Justices pursue the same substantive …
The Many Meanings Of "Politics" In Judicial Decision Making, Bradley W. Joondeph
The Many Meanings Of "Politics" In Judicial Decision Making, Bradley W. Joondeph
Faculty Publications
This essay seeks to untangle the many possible meanings of "politics" in descriptions of judicial behavior. Part I sets out ten possible conceptions of the term, briefly discussing some examples and their empirical foundations. My goal is mostly descriptive (rather than normative), though it is apparent that some conceptions are more useful than others. In all events, claims about the political influences on judicial behavior must be specific about the phenomena they seek to describe. For given the many possible meanings of politics, accounts that lack such specificity are largely vacuous.
Part II builds on this discussion to make two …
Perpetual Dissents, Allison Orr Larsen