Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Lee Epstein
PART I THE JUDGE: MOTIVATIONS, CAREERS AND PERFORMANCE
1. Richard A. Posner (1993), ‘What Do Judges and Justices Maximize?
(The Same Thing Everybody Else Does)’
2. Christopher R. Drahozal (1998), ‘Judicial Incentives and the
Appeals Process’
3. J. Mark Ramseyer and Eric B. Rasmusen (2001), ‘Why Are Japanese
Judges So Conservative in Politically Charged Cases?’
4. Mark A. Cohen (1991), ‘Explaining Judicial Behavior or What's
“Unconstitutional” about the Sentencing Commission?’
5. Daniel Klerman (1999), ‘Nonpromotion and Judicial
Independence’
6. Stephen J. Choi, G. Mitu Gulati and Eric A. Posner (2009), ‘Are
Judges Overpaid?: A Skeptical Response to the Judicial Salary
Debate’
7. Thomas J. Miceli and Metin M. Coşgel (1994), ‘Reputation and
Judicial Decision-Making’
8. Hon. Richard A. Posner (2005), ‘Judicial Behavior and
Performance: An Economic Approach’
9. William M. Landes, Lawrence Lessig and Michael E. Solimine
(1998), ‘Judicial Influence: A Citation Analysis of Federal Courts
of Appeals Judges’
10. Gilat Levy (2005), ‘Careerist Judges and the Appeals
Process’
11. James F. Spriggs, II and Paul J. Wahlbeck (1995), ‘Calling It
Quits: Strategic Retirement on the Federal Courts of Appeals,
1893–1991’
PART II JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE AND DEPENDENCE
12. Rafael La Porta, Florencio López-de-Silanes, Cristian
Pop-Eleches and Andrei Shleifer (2004), ‘Judicial Checks and
Balances’
13. Daniel M. Klerman and Paul G. Mahoney (2005), ‘The Value of
Judicial Independence: Evidence from Eighteenth Century
England’
14. William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner (1975), ‘The
Independent Judiciary in an Interest-Group Perspective’
15. John Ferejohn (1999), ‘Independent Judges, Dependent Judiciary:
Explaining Judicial Independence’
16. Melinda Gann Hall (1992), ‘Electoral Politics and Strategic
Voting in State Supreme Courts’
17. Alexander Tabarrok and Eric Helland (1999), ‘Court Politics:
The Political Economy of Tort Awards’
18. Gregory A. Huber and Sanford C. Gordon (2004), ‘Accountability
and Coercion: Is Justice Blind when It Runs for Office?’
PART III OPINIONS AND PRECEDENT
19. Jeffrey K. Staton and Georg Vanberg (2008) ‘The Value of
Vagueness: Delegation, Defiance, and Judicial Opinions’
20. Michael Abramowicz and Emerson H. Tiller (2009), ‘Citation to
Legislative History: Empirical Evidence on Positive Political and
Contextual Theories of Judicial Decision Making’
21. William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner (1980), ‘Legal Change,
Judicial Behavior, and the Diversity Jurisdiction’
22. Lee Epstein, William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner (2011),
‘Why (and When) Judges Dissent: A Theoretical and Empirical
Analysis’
23. Virginia A. Hettinger, Stefanie A. Lindquist and Wendy L.
Martinek (2004), ‘Comparing Attitudinal and Strategic Accounts of
Dissenting Behavior on the U.S. Courts of Appeals’
24. Eric Rasmusen (1994), ‘Judicial Legitimacy as a Repeated
Game’
25. William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner (1976), ‘Legal
Precedent: A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis’
26. Lewis A. Kornhauser (1992), ‘Modeling Collegial Courts I:
Path-Dependence’
27. Jeffrey A. Segal and Harold J. Spaeth (1996), ‘The Influence of
Stare Decisis on the Votes of United States Supreme Court
Justices’
28. Jack Knight and Lee Epstein (1996), ‘The Norm of Stare
Decisis’
29. Lewis A. Kornhauser (1995), ‘Adjudication by a
Resource-Constrained Team: Hierarchy and Precedent in a Judicial
System’
30. Ethan Bueno de Mesquita and Matthew Stephenson (2002),
‘Informative Precedent and Intrajudicial Communication’
31. Vincy Fon and Francesco Parisi (2006), ‘Judicial Precedents in
Civil Law Systems: A Dynamic Analysis’
32. McNollgast (1995), ‘Politics and the Courts: A Positive Theory
of Judicial Doctrine and the Rule of Law’
33. Nicola Gennaioli and Andrei Shleifer (2007), ‘Overruling and
the Instability of Law’
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editor to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART IV COLLEGIAL COURTS
1. Gregory A. Caldeira, John R. Wright and Christopher J.W. Zorn
(1999), ‘Sophisticated Voting and Gate-Keeping in the Supreme
Court’
2. David W. Rohde (1972), ‘Policy Goals, Strategic Choice and
Majority Opinion Assignments in the U.S. Supreme Court’
3. Jeffrey R. Lax and Charles M. Cameron (2007), ‘Bargaining and
Opinion Assignment on the US Supreme Court’
4. Paul J. Wahlbeck, James F. Spriggs and Forrest Maltzman (1998),
‘Marshalling the Court: Bargaining and Accommodation on the United
States Supreme Court’
5. Chris W. Bonneau, Thomas H. Hammond, Forrest Maltzman and Paul
J. Wahlbeck (2007), ‘Agenda Control, the Median Justice, and the
Majority Opinion on the U.S. Supreme Court’
6. Jeffrey R. Lax (2007), ‘Constructing Legal Rules on Appellate
Courts’
7. Frank H. Easterbrook (1982), ‘Ways of Criticizing the Court’
8. Lewis A. Kornhauser and Lawrence G. Sager (1986), ‘Unpacking the
Court’
9. Robert Anderson IV and Alexander M. Tahk (2007), ‘Institutions
and Equilibrium in the United States Supreme Court’
10. Frank B. Cross and Emerson H. Tiller (1998), ‘Judicial
Partisanship and Obedience to Legal Doctrine: Whistleblowing on the
Federal Courts of Appeal’
11. Sean Farhang and Gregory Wawro (2004), ‘Institutional Dynamics
on the U.S. Court of Appeals: Minority Representation under Panel
Decision Making’
12. Jonathan P. Kastellec (2007), ‘Panel Composition and Judicial
Compliance on the US Courts of Appeals’
PART V THE HIERARCHY OF JUSTICE
13. Jeffrey R. Lax (2003), ‘Certiorari and Compliance in the
Judicial Hierarchy: Discretion, Reputation and the Rule of
Four’
14. Charles M. Cameron, Jeffrey A. Segal and Donald Songer (2000),
‘Strategic Auditing in a Political Hierarchy: An Informational
Model of the Supreme Court’s Certiorari Decisions’
15. Tracey E. George and Michael E. Solimine (2001), ‘Supreme Court
Monitoring of the United States Courts of Appeals En Banc’
16. Tom S. Clark (2009), ‘A Principal-Agent Theory of En Banc
Review’
17. Linda R. Cohen and Matthew L. Spitzer (1994), ‘Solving the
Chevron Puzzle’
18. Matt Spitzer and Eric Talley (2000), ‘Judicial Auditing’
19. Steven Shavell, (1995), ‘The Appeals Process as a Means of
Error Correction’
20. Chad Westerland, Jeffrey A. Segal, Lee Epstein, Charles M.
Cameron and Scott Comparato (2010), ‘Strategic Defiance and
Compliance in the U.S. Courts of Appeals’
21. Walter F. Murphy (1959), ‘Lower Court Checks on Supreme Court
Power’
PART VI EXECUTIVE AND LEGISLATURE
22. Rafael Gely and Pablo T. Spiller (1990), ‘A Rational Choice
Theory of Supreme Court Statutory Decisions with Applications to
the “State Farm” and “Grove City Cases”’
23. William N. Eskridge, Jr. (1991), ‘Overriding Supreme Court
Statutory Interpretation Decisions’
24. John A. Ferejohn and Barry R. Weingast (1992), ‘A Positive
Theory of Statutory Interpretation’
25. Jeffrey A. Segal, Chad Westerland and Stefanie A. Lindquist
(2011), ‘Congress, the Supreme Court, and Judicial Review: Testing
a Constitutional Separation of Powers Model’
26. Tom S. Clark (2009), ‘The Separation of Powers, Court Curbing,
and Judicial Legitimacy’
27. Gretchen Helmke (2002), ‘The Logic of Strategic Defection:
Court-Executive Relations in Argentina Under Dictatorship and
Democracy’
28. Lee Epstein, Jack Knight and Olga Shvetsova (2001), ‘The Role
of Constitutional Courts in the Establishment and Maintenance of
Democratic Systems of Government’
29. Georg Vanberg (2001), ‘Legislative-Judicial Relations: A
Game-Theoretic Approach to Constitutional Review’
30. James R. Rogers (2001), ‘Information and Judicial Review: A
Signaling Game of Legislative-Judicial Interaction’
31. Joseph L. Smith and Emerson H. Tiller (2002), ‘The Strategy of
Judging: Evidence from Administrative Law’
32. William H. Riker and Barry R. Weingast (1988), ‘Constitutional
Regulation of Legislative Choice: The Political Consequences of
Judicial Deference to Legislatures’
Edited by Lee Epstein, Provost Professor of Law and Political Science and Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law, University of Southern California, US
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