On the Nature of Supreme Court Decision Making
- 1 June 1992
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 86 (2) , 323-337
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1964223
Abstract
How does the U.S. Supreme Court reach decisions? Since the 1940s, scholars have focused on two distinct explanations.The legal modelsuggests that the rule of law (stare decisis) is the key determinant. Theextralegalmodel posits that an array of sociological, psychological, and political factors produce judicial outcomes. To determine which model better accounted for judicial decisions, we used Supreme Court cases involving the imposition of the death penalty since 1972 and estimated and evaluated the models' success in accounting for decisional outcomes. Although both models performed quite satisfactorily, they possessed disturbing weaknesses. The legal perspective overpredicted liberal outcomes, the extralegal model conservative ones. Given these results, we tested another proposition, namely that extralegal and legal frameworks present codependent, not mutually exclusive, explanations of decision making. Based on these results, we offer an integrated model of Supreme Court decision making that contemplates a range of political and environmental forces and doctrinal constraints.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Foreign Policy and Presidential PopularityJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1990
- Increasing the Size of Minimum Winning Original Coalitions on the Warren CourtPolity, 1990
- The Supreme Court and Criminal Justice Disputes: A Neo-Institutional PerspectiveAmerican Journal of Political Science, 1989
- Linear Probability, Logit, and Probit Models.Journal of the American Statistical Association, 1988
- Are Social Background Models Time-Bound?American Political Science Review, 1986
- The President and the Political Use of ForceAmerican Political Science Review, 1986
- The Language of Equality in a Constitutional OrderAmerican Political Science Review, 1981
- The Call for a Realist JurisprudenceHarvard Law Review, 1931
- Constitutional Law in 1927–1928: The Constitutional Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in the October Term, 1927American Political Science Review, 1929
- Constitutional Law in 1922–1923: The Constitutional Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States in the October Term, 1922American Political Science Review, 1924