- The Oxford Handbooks of American Politics
- The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Judicial Behavior
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Contributors
- Appointing Federal Judges
- Appointing Supreme Court Justices
- Judicial Elections: Judges and their “New-Style” Constituencies
- Federal Judicial Tenure
- Law Clerks
- Gatekeeping and Filtering in Trial Courts
- Access to Intermediate Appellate Courts
- Agenda-Setting on the U.S. Supreme Court
- Courtroom Proceedings in U.S. Federal Courts
- Opinion Writing
- Vertical <i>Stare Decisis</i>
- Law in Judicial Decision-Making
- The Strategic Analysis of Judicial Behavior and the Separation of Powers
- Judicial Review
- The Role of Personal Attributes and Social Backgrounds on Judging
- Ideology and Partisanship
- The Economic Analysis of Judicial Behavior
- Judges and their Audiences
- Interest Groups and the Judiciary
- The Relationship between Courts and Legislatures
- Courts and Executives
- Covering the Courts
- The Supreme Court and Public Opinion
- Judicial Impact
- Cognition in the Courts: Analyzing the Use of Experiments to Study Legal Decision-Making
- New Measurement Technologies: A Review and Application to Nuremberg and Justice Jackson
- The Use of Observational Data to Study Law and the Judiciary
- Index
(p. xxv) List of Abbreviations
(p. xxv) List of Abbreviations
ABA | American Bar Association |
ACA | Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act |
ACLU | American Civil Liberties Union |
ACS | American Constitution Society |
ADA | Americans for Democratic Action |
ADR | Alternative Dispute Resolution |
AEDPA | Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act |
CFR | call for a response |
CVSG | call for the views of the Solicitor General |
CRT | Cognitive Reflection Test |
FDR | Franklin Delano Roosevelt |
FELA | Federal Employee Liability Act |
FICA | Federal Insurance Contributions Act |
FJC | Federal Judicial Center |
FMLA | Family Medical Leave Act |
FRAP | Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure |
FTC | Federal Trade Commission |
GSS | General Social Survey |
GVR | grant, vacate, and remand |
IAT | Implicit Associations Test |
IRT | item response theoretic |
JCS | Judicial Common Space |
LDF | Legal Defense Fund |
MCMC | Markov Chain Monte Carlo |
MQ | Martin-Quinn |
NAACP | National Association for the Advancement of Colored People |
NOW | National Organization for Women |
NRA | National Rifle Association |
(p. xxvi) NSF | National Science Foundation |
OSG | Office of the Solicitor General |
PAIJD | party-adjusted judicial ideology |
PLRA | Prison Litigation Reform Act |
QPC | question prioritaire de constitutionnalité |
SG | Solicitor General |
SOP | separation of powers |
SSA | Social Security Act |
SCDB | Supreme Court Judicial Database |
WL | Westlaw |
- The Oxford Handbooks of American Politics
- The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Judicial Behavior
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Contributors
- Appointing Federal Judges
- Appointing Supreme Court Justices
- Judicial Elections: Judges and their “New-Style” Constituencies
- Federal Judicial Tenure
- Law Clerks
- Gatekeeping and Filtering in Trial Courts
- Access to Intermediate Appellate Courts
- Agenda-Setting on the U.S. Supreme Court
- Courtroom Proceedings in U.S. Federal Courts
- Opinion Writing
- Vertical <i>Stare Decisis</i>
- Law in Judicial Decision-Making
- The Strategic Analysis of Judicial Behavior and the Separation of Powers
- Judicial Review
- The Role of Personal Attributes and Social Backgrounds on Judging
- Ideology and Partisanship
- The Economic Analysis of Judicial Behavior
- Judges and their Audiences
- Interest Groups and the Judiciary
- The Relationship between Courts and Legislatures
- Courts and Executives
- Covering the Courts
- The Supreme Court and Public Opinion
- Judicial Impact
- Cognition in the Courts: Analyzing the Use of Experiments to Study Legal Decision-Making
- New Measurement Technologies: A Review and Application to Nuremberg and Justice Jackson
- The Use of Observational Data to Study Law and the Judiciary
- Index