These Estimable Courts: Understanding Public Perceptions of State Judicial Institutions and Legal Policy-Making
These Estimable Courts: Understanding Public Perceptions of State Judicial Institutions and Legal Policy-Making
Associate Professor of Political Science
Professor of Political Science
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Abstract
This book investigates and analyzes how citizens feel about the government institutions at the front lines of jurisprudential policymaking in the United States: the nation's state and local courts. The book’s central focus concerns a primary question of governance: Why do people support and find legitimate the institutions that govern their lives? Specifically, the authors are interested in what drives citizens’ support for their state and local courts, and what influences public opinion regarding the proper role of these courts in American society and how judicial policymaking should be approached. A viable democracy depends upon citizen belief in the legitimacy of government institutions. Nowhere is this more evident than in judicial institutions. Indeed, courts are unusually vulnerable democratic institutions that lack appreciable influence over "either the sword or the purse." Accordingly, courts depend heavily on a reservoir of public goodwill and institutional legitimacy to get their decrees obeyed by the public and implemented by other policy actors. It enables courts to weather the storm of counter-majoritarian decisions and to remain effective governing bodies whose edicts are respected and followed. In addition to assessing citizens’ belief in the legitimacy of state courts, this work examines a number of related, and important, concerns. These include people’s views concerning how judges decide cases, the role of judges and courts in policymaking, the manner in which judges are selected, and, finally, the dynamics of citizens’ views regarding compliance with the law and legal institutions.
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Front Matter
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1
Introduction
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2
Courts We Can Believe In
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3
These Estimable Courts: How State Court Legitimacy Is Perceived by Citizens
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4
People in Robes Making Law: Citizens on the Bases of Judicial Decision-Making
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5
The Role of the Robe: Considering Courts as Policymakers
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6
Who Gets the Gavel? Citizens’ Views on the Selection of Judges
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7
“The Better Angels of Our Nature”: On Court Legitimacy and Obeying the Law
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End Matter
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