Publication | Closed Access
The Influence of Home-State Reputation and Public Opinion on Federal Circuit Court Judges
19
Citations
50
References
2019
Year
Constitutional LawHome-state ReputationState Public OpinionLawCriminal LawPublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesBiasLegal ProcessLegal Information RetrievalCase LawPublic PolicyCriminal JusticeFederal JudgesJudgement AggregationConstitutional LitigationFederal Constitutional LawJusticePolitical ScienceOpinion AggregationProcedural Justice
Abstract At least four observationally equivalent theories argue that federal judges follow public opinion when they decide cases. Yet there is mixed empirical support for these theories. Using recently released data on public opinion, we discover that state public opinion exerts a meaningful impact on the votes of federal circuit court judges. Perhaps more important, we leverage a number of different empirical approaches to identify which theory the data support. The data suggest that circuit court judges may change along with society but also that they follow public opinion because they care about their reputations in their home states.
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