“Haves” Versus “Have Nots” in State Supreme Courts: Allocating Docket Space and Wins in Power Asymmetric Cases
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Law & Society Review
- Vol. 35 (2) , 393-417
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3185407
Abstract
This article evaluates two basic issues about dockets and case outcomes in American appellate courts. First, what determines the extent to which a court devotes its docket to civil cases involving asymmetrical power relationships between litigants? Second, in civil cases in which the “have-nots” are pitted against the “haves,” which forces determine the extent to which courts favor the less privileged? To answer these questions, we identify power asymmetric civil cases and the size of each court's docket by examining all 6,750 cases decided in state supreme courts in 1996. Results reveal that contextual factors are formidable in shaping both agenda space and win rates in civil disputes involving conflicts between advantaged and disadvantaged litigants. Institutional features of supreme courts and state court systems, the supply of legal resources, and public preferences all emerge as critical influences on the willingness of the states' highest courts to decide have/have not conflicts and on the ultimate disposition of these cases. In sum, a comprehensive understanding of the ways in which courts treat cases involving the disadvantaged and, more broadly, function as agents of redistributive change cannot be achieved without focusing beyond the ideological preferences of judges and the skill of the litigants.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Amicus Curiae and the Role of Information at the Supreme CourtPolitical Research Quarterly, 1997
- The Success of Amici in State Supreme CourtsPolitical Research Quarterly, 1995
- Studying Courts Comparatively: The View from the American StatesPolitical Research Quarterly, 1995
- Exploring the Participation of Organized Interests in State Court LitigationPolitical Research Quarterly, 1994
- Ideology, Status, and The Differential Success of Direct Parties Before the Supreme CourtAmerican Political Science Review, 1992
- Organized Interests and Agenda Setting in the U.S. Supreme CourtAmerican Political Science Review, 1988
- Amicus Curiae Briefs By the Solicitor General During the Warren and Burger Courts: a Research NoteThe Western Political Quarterly, 1988
- The Business of State Supreme Courts, 1870-1970Stanford Law Review, 1977
- Formal Judicial Recruitment and State Supreme Court DecisionsAmerican Politics Quarterly, 1974
- Policy without Law: An Extension of the Certiorari GameStanford Law Review, 1962