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Produktdetails

Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Springer Netherland
Erschienen
2016
Sprache
English
Seiten
240
Infos
240 Seiten
235 mm x 155 mm
ISBN
978-94-017-7986-9

Hauptbeschreibung

This volume presents a variety of both normative and descriptive perspectives on the use of precedent by the United States Supreme Court. It brings together a diverse group of American legal scholars, some of whom have been influenced by the Segal/Spaeth "attitudinal" model and some of whom have not. The group of contributors includes legal theorists and empiricists, constitutional lawyers and legal generalists, leading authorities and up-and-coming scholars. The book addresses questions such as how the Court establishes durable precedent, how the Court decides to overrule precedent, the effects of precedent on case selection, the scope of constitutional precedent, the influence of concurrences and dissents, and the normative foundations of constitutional precedent. Most of these questions have been addressed by the Court itself only obliquely, if at all. The volume will be valuable to readers both in the United States and abroad, particularly in light of ongoing debates over the role of precedent in civil-law nations and emerging legal systems.

Inhaltsverzeichnis


Contributors.- Introduction; Christopher J. Peters.- 1 The Dialectic of Stare Decisis Doctrine; Colin Starger.- 2 Did Casey Strike Out? Following and Overruling Constitutional Precedents in the Supreme Court; Larry Alexander.- 3 An Epistemic Defense of Precedent; Deborah Hellman.- 4 Private-Rights Litigation and the Normative Foundations of Durable Constitutional Precedent ; Maxwell L. Stearns.- 5 Group Formation and Precedent; Neal Devins.- 6 Stare Decisis and the Selection Effect; Frederick Schauer.- 7 Methodological Stare Decisis and Constitutional Interpretation; Chad M. Oldfather.- 8 Constitutional Method and the Path of Precedent; Randy J. Kozel.- 9 Originalism, Stare Decisis, and Constitutional Authority; Christopher J. Peters.- Index.


Klappentext

This volume presents a variety of both normative and descriptive perspectives on the use of precedent by the United States Supreme Court.  It brings together a diverse group of American legal scholars, some of whom have been influenced by the Segal/Spaeth "attitudinal" model and some of whom have not. The group of contributors includes legal theorists and empiricists, constitutional lawyers and legal generalists, leading authorities and up-and-coming scholars.  The book addresses questions such as how the Court establishes durable precedent, how the Court decides to overrule precedent, the effects of precedent on case selection, the scope of constitutional precedent, the influence of concurrences and dissents, and the normative foundations of constitutional precedent.  Most of these questions have been addressed by the Court itself only obliquely, if at all. The volume will be valuable to readers both in the United States and abroad, particularly in light of ongoing debates over the role of precedent in civil-law nations and emerging legal systems.