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Journal ArticleDOI

Words Are Enough: The Troublesome Use of Photographs, Maps, and Other Images in Supreme Court Opinions

Hampton Dellinger
- 01 Jun 1997 - 
- Vol. 110, Iss: 8, pp 1704
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TLDR
Dellinger as mentioned in this paper defines and analyzes a class of United States Supreme Court decisions in which a photograph, map, replica, or reproduction is attached to a Justice's opinion.
Abstract
In this Commentary, Mr. Dellinger defines and analyses a heretofore unrecognized class of United States Supreme Court decisions: those in which a photograph, map, replica, or reproduction is attached to a Justice's opinion. Such attachments, all relying on visual or sight-based attributes that uniquely differentiate them from words, have appeared in a number of seminal decisions. Mr. Dellinger argues that the use of such attachments poses special dangers: because their neutrality and accuracy are so readily assumed, such attachments often elude the skepticism with which the written positions of Court opinions are generally reviewed. yet their inherent distortions and vulnerability to manipulation make the Justices' reliance on them problematic. Mr. Dellinger then argues that the Court should forgo any future reliance on attachments. In the alternative, the Justices, the companies that reproduce Court opinions, and readers must improve significantly the ways in which they respectively use, publish, and review these attachments.

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Visual Religious Symbols and the Law

TL;DR: In this article, a set of cases in which members of ethnic minority groups challenge policies denying them the right to wear symbols important for the maintenance of their social identities are considered. And the number of disputes involving religious garb and hairstyles demonstrates how visual religious symbols are often perceived as threatening.

The Supreme Court that Stole…Christmas? Measuring the Fallout from Lynch and Allegheny: A Critique of the Establishment Clause and Religious Displays

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Cartography and Population Geography as Current Events: A Case Study

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Journal ArticleDOI

Say it with Images: Drawing on Jerome Frank’s Ideas on Judicial Decision Making

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the role of images in judicial decision-making from a judge's perspective and reveal the existential features of both passing judgments and articulating decision making processes by and for judges themselves.
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