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Open AccessJournal Article

Doctrine Formulation and Distrust

Toby J. Heytens
- 01 Jan 2008 - 
- Vol. 83, Iss: 5, pp 2045
TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that part of the answer lies in the Court's ability to craft legal doctrines that both shape a trial court's initial decision and increase the efficacy of appellate monitoring.
Abstract
Legal scholars exhaustively debate the substantive wisdom of Supreme Court decisions and the appropriate methods for interpreting legal texts but rarely consider the more pragmatic need to craft rules that will be faithfully implemented by the lower court judges who have the last word in the overwhelming majority of cases. Political scientists, in contrast, invest tremendous effort seeking to determine whether lower courts “comply” with Supreme Court directives, but find themselves unable to explain why their own studies generally find high levels of compliance. This Article argues that part of the answer lies in the Court’s ability to craft legal doctrines that both shape a trial court’s initial decision and increase the efficacy of appellate monitoring. After identifying numerous strategies for increasing lower court control, this Article argues that appreciating the links between them helps illuminate recent developments in three areas of public law: the constitutional law of punitive damages; the rules governing “officer suits” brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; and the concept of “reasonable” searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment.

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The New Judicial Politics of Legal Doctrine

TL;DR: The case-space model as discussed by the authors is an adaption of standard policy-space modeling, tailored for the distinguishing features of judicial policy making, allowing for ideological differences between judges while expressing those differences in terms of legal rules that partition fact-filled legal cases into different dispositions.
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Political Constraints on Legal Doctrine: How Hierarchy Shapes the Law

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the structure of doctrine affects the application of and compliance with doctrine by lower courts, and this in turn affects choice among doctrinal structures, and that these incentives have counterintuitive effects on lower court discretion and on doctrinal specificity.
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TL;DR: This paper developed a model of opinion writing in the judicial hierarchy, which adopts a case-space approach to judicial decision-making with informational asymmetries across levels of the hierarchy.
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Reasoning with previous decisions: beyond the doctrine of precedent

TL;DR: In this paper, the continental European tradition has its own ways of dealing with cases and these techniques can appear different from the common law "case law method" but are no less rational and intellectually sophisticated.