The Puzzle of Unanimity: Consensus on the United States Supreme Court
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The Puzzle of Unanimity: Consensus on the United States Supreme Court
Award-Winning: Recognized as an Outstanding Academic Title in 2014 by Choice
Sourced from U.S. Supreme Court database, internal documents, and justices' private papers
First Complete Account: Explores how the Court achieves consensus
Consensus Formation: Result of multiple, concurrent factors beyond ideological attitudes
Strong Evidence: Provides generalizable support for the presented theory
Comprehensive Study: Examines all unanimous and near-unanimous decisions from 1953 to 2004
The U.S. Supreme Court typically rules on cases that present complex legal questions. Given the challenging nature of its cases and the popular view that the Court is divided along ideological lines, it's commonly assumed that the Court routinely hands down equally-divided decisions. Yet the justices actually issue unanimous decisions in approximately one third of the cases they decide.
Drawing on data from the U.S. Supreme Court database, internal court documents, and the justices' private papers, The Puzzle of Unanimity provides the first comprehensive account of how the Court reaches consensus. Pamela Corley, Amy Steigerwalt, and Artemus Ward propose and empirically test a theory of consensus; they find consensus is a function of multiple, concurrently-operating forces that cannot be fully accounted for by ideological attitudes. In this thorough investigation, the authors conclude that consensus is a function of the level of legal certainty and its ability to constrain justices' ideological preferences.