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Journal ArticleDOI

Sophisticated voting and gate-keeping in the supreme court

Gregory A. Caldeira, +2 more
- 01 Oct 1999 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 3, pp 549-572
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TLDR
The U.S. Supreme Court is one institution where sophisticated voting should be common, but, paradoxically, where scholarly consensus about its existence has yet to emerge as mentioned in this paper, and sophisticated voting has raised serious questions about its empirical importance in real-world institutions.
Abstract
"Sophisticated voting" has a solid theoretical foundation, but scholars have raised serious questions about its empirical importance in real-world institutions. The U.S. Supreme Court is one institution where sophisticated voting should be common, but, paradoxically, where scholarly consensus about its existence has yet to emerge. We develop and test a formal model of sophisticated voting on agenda setting in the Supreme Court. Using data on petitions for certiorari decided in October term 1982, we show that, above and beyond the usual forces in case selection, justices engage in sophisticated voting, defined as looking forward to the decision on the merits and acting with that potential outcome in mind, and do so in a wide range of circumstances. In particular, we present strong evidence for sophisticated behavior, ranging from votes to deny a case one prefers to reverse to votes to grant cases one prefers to affirm. More importantly, sophisticated voting makes a substantial difference in the size and content of the Court's plenary agenda. Copyright 1999 by Oxford University Press.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Information and Judicial Review: A Signaling Game of Legislative-Judicial Interaction

TL;DR: In this article, a simple signaling game is developed in which a Legislature and a Court interact in seeking their own policy goals, where the Court's exercise of the judicial veto may (but not necessarily will) be informationally productive.
Book

Measuring Judicial Independence: The Political Economy of Judging in Japan

TL;DR: Ramer and Eric B. Rasmusen as mentioned in this paper use the latest statistical techniques to examine whether (and if so, to what extent) Japanese politicians manipulate the careers of lower court judges to political advantage, they find that Japanese politicians do influence judicial careers discreetly and indirectly: judges who decide politically charged cases in ways favored by the ruling party enjoy better careers after their decisions than those who do not.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why (and When) Judges Dissent: A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, a model of self-interested judicial behavior was developed and tested to explore the phenomenon of judicial dissents, and in particular what they call "dissent aversion", which sometimes causes a judge not to dissent even when he disagrees with the majority opinion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Strategic Revolution in Judicial Politics: A Look Back, A Look Ahead

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the strategic revolution in the field of judicial politics and provide an intellectual history of the field, with special emphasis on why judicial specialists resisted strategic analysis for so long and why they are now turning to it in ever increasing numbers.
Posted Content

The Influence of Oral Arguments on the U.S. Supreme Court

TL;DR: This paper showed that the probability of a justice voting for a litigant's lawyer increases dramatically if that litigants' lawyer presents better oral arguments than the competing counsel, and that this element of the Court's decisional process affects final votes on the merits.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: In this article, an extension of generalized linear models to the analysis of longitudinal data is proposed, which gives consistent estimates of the regression parameters and of their variance under mild assumptions about the time dependence.
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Scott L. Zeger, +1 more
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TL;DR: A class of generalized estimating equations (GEEs) for the regression parameters is proposed, extensions of those used in quasi-likelihood methods which have solutions which are consistent and asymptotically Gaussian even when the time dependence is misspecified as the authors often expect.
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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.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Approximate Analysis of Variance Test for Normality

TL;DR: In this paper, a modification of the Shapiro-Wilk W statistic for testing normality which can be used with large samples is presented. But the proposed test uses coefficients which depend only on the expected values of the normal order statistics which are generally available.