Publication | Open Access
The Legitimacy of the US Supreme Court: Conventional Wisdoms and Recent Challenges Thereto
145
Citations
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2014
Year
Constitutional LawLawComparative Public LawCriminal LawAdministrative LawPublic OpinionInternational CourtSocial SciencesLegal AnalyticsLegal TheoryLegal ProcessRecent Challenges TheretoCase LawJudicial StudiesAmerican PoliticsLegitimacy TheoryUnited States ConstitutionConventional WisdomsUs Supreme CourtJudicial DecisionsConstitutional LitigationLegal HistoryFederal Constitutional LawJusticePolitical ScienceConstitution
Research on the legitimacy of the US Supreme Court has blossomed of late, with scholars investigating many different hypotheses derived from legitimacy theory. As the theory has been pushed, a number of new controversies have emerged. Here, we identify four such debates: (a) whether the Court's legitimacy rests on satisfaction with its performance, (b) whether support for the Supreme Court reflects the polarization of politics in the contemporary United States, (c) whether the Court's legitimacy requires belief in the “myth of legality”, and (d) whether judicial decisions can change public opinion. Our analysis of these issues generally concludes that the Supreme Court's legitimacy is reasonably secure, in part because individual rulings have little impact on support for the institution, in part because the Court has access to powerful and influential symbols of judicial authority, and in part because the current Supreme Court issues roughly equal numbers of conservative and liberal decisions.
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