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Measuring Judicial Activism supplies empirical analysis to the widely discussed concept of judicial activism at the United States Supreme Court. Complaints about activist Court decisions are common within contemporary political discourse, but these objections often have little substantive meaning beyond the speaker's disagreement with particular case outcomes. Frequently debated by legal scholars, judicial activism is shaped by the participants' ideological perspectives as well as by their subjective views regarding ambiguous constitutional provisions. Although no study can be perfectly…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Measuring Judicial Activism supplies empirical analysis to the widely discussed concept of judicial activism at the United States Supreme Court. Complaints about activist Court decisions are common within contemporary political discourse, but these objections often have little substantive meaning beyond the speaker's disagreement with particular case outcomes. Frequently debated by legal scholars, judicial activism is shaped by the participants' ideological perspectives as well as by their subjective views regarding ambiguous constitutional provisions. Although no study can be perfectly objective, Measuring Judicial Activism seeks to move beyond these more subjective debates by conceptualizing activism in non-ideological terms, identifying specific empirical dimensions to the concept, and measuring those dimensions using systematic social scientific techniques. In so doing, the book allows the authors to assess the relative "activism" of recent justices on the Court.
Autorenporträt
Frank B. Cross is the Herbert D. Kelleher Centennial Professor of Business Law at the University of Texas School of Law and the author of The Theory and Practice of Statutory Interpretation (Stanford University Press, forthcoming 2008); Decision Making in the U.S. Courts of Appeals (Stanford University Press, 2007); Frank B. Cross & Robert A. Prentice, Law and Corporate Finance (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2007). Stefanie Lindquist is the Thomas W. Gregory Professor of Law at the University of Texas School of Law and the co-author of Judging on a Collegial Court: Influences on Appellate Court Decision Making (with Virginia Hettinger & Wendy Martinek (University of Virginia Press, 2006).