On Separation of Powers and Obfuscation in US Supreme Court Opinions

IF 0.8 Q2 LAW Journal of Law and Courts Pub Date : 2022-12-01 DOI:10.1017/jlc.2022.7
D. Lempert
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Abstract

A longstanding debate in American judicial politics concerns whether the US Supreme Court anticipates or responds to the possibility that Congress will override its decisions. A recent theory proposes that opinions that are relatively hard to read are more costly for Congress to review, and that as a result, the Court can decrease the likelihood of override from a hostile Congress by obfuscating its opinions (i.e., writing opinions that are less readable when congressional review is a threat). I derive a straightforward but novel empirical implication of this theory; I then show that the implication does not in fact hold. This casts serious doubt on the claim that justices strategically obfuscate opinion language to avoid congressional override. I also discuss sentence tokenization as a source of measurement error in readability statistics for judicial opinions.
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论美国最高法院意见中的三权分立与混淆
美国司法政治中一个长期存在的争论是,美国最高法院是否预料到国会将推翻其决定的可能性,或者对这种可能性做出回应。最近的一项理论提出,相对难以阅读的意见对国会的审查成本更高,因此,最高法院可以通过混淆其意见(即,当国会审查是一种威胁时,撰写不太可读的意见)来降低敌对国会推翻的可能性。我从这一理论中得出了一个直截了当但新颖的实证含义;然后,我证明这种暗示实际上并不成立。这让人对法官们策略性地模糊意见语言以避免国会推翻的说法产生了严重的怀疑。我还讨论了句子标记化作为司法意见可读性统计测量误差的来源。
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2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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