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Journal ArticleDOI

Institutions and Equilibrium in the United States Supreme Court

TLDR
The authors formalizes the "part-by-part" opinion voting used by the justices, a feature that, together with separable preferences over policy issues, implies stable policy outcomes around the issue-byissue median of the justices.
Abstract
Over the last decade the scholarship on judicial politics has increasingly emphasized the strategic aspects of decision making in the United States Supreme Court. This scholarship, however, has struggled with two significant limitations—the restriction to unidimensional policy spaces and the assumption of binary comparisons of alternatives. These two assumptions have the advantage of implying stable, predictable outcomes, but lack a sound theoretical foundation and assume away potentially important aspects of strategic behavior on the Court. In this article, we identify institutional features of the Court that, under certain conditions, allow us to relax these two assumptions without sacrificing stable, predictable policy outcomes. In particular, we formalize the “part-by-part” opinion voting used by the justices, a feature that, together with separable preferences over policy issues, implies stable policy outcomes around the issue-by-issue median of the justices.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Locating Supreme Court Opinions in Doctrine Space

TL;DR: This paper developed a scaling model to estimate opinion locations and justice ideal points along a common, continuous dimension using the citations between opinions as data, assuming that each opinion has a fixed location in this unidimensional doctrine space and that the probability of a citation that affirms rather than disputes the doctrine of the precedent decreases as the doctrinal distance between them increases.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Posted Content

Predicting the Behavior of the Supreme Court of the United States: A General Approach

TL;DR: The model is distinctive as it is the first robust, generalized, and fully predictive model of Supreme Court voting behavior offered to date and represents a major advance for the science of quantitative legal prediction.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Strategic Analysis of Judicial Decisions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the literature on the forms of strategic behavior in which (preference-maximizing) judges engage when interacting with other relevant actors, including their colleagues, their judicial superiors, and members of the other branches of government.
References
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Book

Social Choice and Individual Values

TL;DR: Saari as mentioned in this paper introduced Arrow's Theorem and founded the field of social choice theory in economics and political science, and introduced a new foreword by Nobel laureate Eric Maskin, introducing Arrow's seminal book to a new generation of students and researchers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Choice and Individual Values.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a destination search and find the appropriate manuals for their products, providing you with many Social Choice And Individual Values. You can find the manual you are interested in in printed form or even consider it online.
Journal ArticleDOI

Institutional Arrangements and Equilibrium in Multidimensional Voting Models

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on three aspects of organization: (1) a division-of-labor arrangement called a committee system, (2) a specialization-oflabor system called a jurisdictional arrangement, and (3) a monitoring mechanism by which a parent organization constrains the autonomy of its subunits called an amendment control rule.
Book

The art of political manipulation

TL;DR: Riker as discussed by the authors discusses the feature of politics that all of the manipulators exploited and sketches out the new political theory that explains why manipulation works the way it does, which is a useful and entertaining informal essay on political tactics that will have direct utility in the classroom.