Courts Under Constraints

This book PDF is perfect for those who love Law genre, written by Gretchen Helmke and published by Cambridge University Press which was released on 19 July 2012 with total hardcover pages 243. You could read this book directly on your devices with pdf, epub and kindle format, check detail and related Courts Under Constraints books below.

Courts Under Constraints
Author : Gretchen Helmke
File Size : 41,8 Mb
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Language : English
Release Date : 19 July 2012
ISBN : 9781107405202
Pages : 243 pages
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Courts Under Constraints by Gretchen Helmke Book PDF Summary

This book is a study of how institutional instability affects judicial behavior under dictatorship and democracy.

Courts Under Constraints

This book is a study of how institutional instability affects judicial behavior under dictatorship and democracy.

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Courts under Constraints

This 2005 study offers a theoretical framework for understanding how institutional instability affects judicial behavior under dictatorship and democracy. In stark contrast to conventional wisdom, the central findings of the book contradict some assumptions that only independent judges rule against the government of the day. Set in the context of Argentina,

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The Constrained Court

How do Supreme Court justices decide their cases? Do they follow their policy preferences? Or are they constrained by the law and by other political actors? The Constrained Court combines new theoretical insights and extensive data analysis to show that law and politics together shape the behavior of justices on

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The Hollow Hope

In follow-up studies, dozens of reviews, and even a book of essays evaluating his conclusions, Gerald Rosenberg’s critics—not to mention his supporters—have spent nearly two decades debating the arguments he first put forward in The Hollow Hope. With this substantially expanded second edition of his landmark work,

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Reputation and Judicial Tactics

This book argues that national and international courts seek to enhance their reputations through the strategic exercise of judicial power. Courts often cannot enforce their judgments and must rely on reputational sanctions to ensure compliance. One way to do this is for courts to improve their reputation for generating compliance

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The Constrained Court

How do Supreme Court justices decide their cases? Do they follow their policy preferences? Or are they constrained by the law and by other political actors? The Constrained Court combines new theoretical insights and extensive data analysis to show that law and politics together shape the behavior of justices on

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The Judicial Process

In the absence of a sound conception of the judicial role, judges at present can be said to be 'muddling along'. They disown the declaratory theory of law but continue to behave and think as if it had not been discredited. Much judicial reasoning still exhibits an unquestioning acceptance of

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Commitment and Cooperation on High Courts

Judicial decision-making may ideally be impartial, but in reality it is influenced by many different factors, including institutional context, ideological commitment, fellow justices on a panel, and personal preference. Empirical literature in this area increasingly analyzes this complex collection of factors in isolation, when a larger sample size of comparative

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