Keep Your (Horse) Hair On? Experimental Evidence on the Effect of Exposure to Legitimising Symbols on Diffuse Support for the High Court

Q3 Social Sciences Federal Law Review Pub Date : 2020-06-05 DOI:10.1177/0067205X20927818
I. Nielsen, Zoe Robinson, R. Smyth
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Abstract

Positivity theory posits that the courts rely on powerful legitimising symbols—such as elaborate judicial attire, honorific forms of address and imposing courtroom design—to ensure legitimacy in the eyes of the public in the absence of an electoral mandate. The argument is that such legitimising symbols evoke images of learning and pageantry and create the presumption that the process by which the decision was made was fair. Typically, positivity theory has been tested by examining whether people who have a greater awareness or knowledge of the courts express higher diffuse support for their decisions. Yet, such an approach assumes that those who know more about the courts will have greater exposure to their legitimising symbols. It does not directly test if exposure to the courts’ legitimising symbols causes people to be more acquiescent with decisions with which they disagree. In this article we use a survey-based experiment to examine if exposure to the legitimising symbols of the High Court makes people more willing to accept decisions of the Court with which they disagree. We assess whether the decision of the High Court Justices to simplify their attire, including, since 1988, ceasing to wear wigs when sitting on the Bench, has adversely affected the Court’s institutional legitimacy by removing some of the mystique associated with the decision-making process. We find that exposure to the Court’s legitimising symbols is associated with higher acquiescence with decisions which people disagree with, but the Court’s decision to simplify the Justices’ attire has not adversely affected diffuse support for its decisions. Our findings are important because the Court is reliant on maintaining legitimacy to enforce the rule of law. Our results speak directly to how the Court can best take steps to increase its institutional legitimacy in the eyes of the public.
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留着你(马)的头发?暴露于合法符号对高等法院广泛支持的影响的实验证据
积极性理论认为,在没有选举授权的情况下,法院依靠强大的合法性象征,如精心设计的司法服装、尊称形式和引人注目的法庭设计,来确保公众眼中的合法性。争论的焦点是,这种合法化的符号唤起了学习和壮观的画面,并创造了一种假设,即做出决定的过程是公平的。通常,积极性理论是通过检验对法院有更高认识或了解的人是否对他们的判决表示更高的分散支持来进行检验的。然而,这种方法假设那些对法院了解更多的人将更容易接触到他们的合法化象征。它并没有直接测试暴露在法院的合法化符号中是否会导致人们更加默许他们不同意的决定。在这篇文章中,我们使用了一项基于调查的实验来检验接触高等法院的合法化象征是否会让人们更愿意接受他们不同意的法院裁决。我们评估高等法院法官简化着装的决定,包括自1988年以来,在法官席上不再戴假发,是否消除了与决策过程相关的一些神秘感,从而对法院的制度合法性产生了不利影响。我们发现,接触法院的合法化符号与人们对不同意的裁决的默许程度较高有关,但法院简化法官着装的决定并没有对其裁决的广泛支持产生不利影响。我们的调查结果很重要,因为法院依靠维持合法性来执行法治。我们的结果直接说明了法院如何能够最好地采取措施,提高其在公众眼中的机构合法性。
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来源期刊
Federal Law Review
Federal Law Review Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
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