Administering Justice
Placing the Chief Justice in American State Politics
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https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3998/mpub.12079561Author(s)
Vining, Richard
Wilhelm, Teena
Language
EnglishAbstract
Administering Justice examines the leadership role of chief justices in the American states, including how those duties require chief justices to be part of the broader state political environment. Vining and Wilhelm focus extensively on the power of chief justices as public spokespersons, legislative liaisons, and reform leaders. In contrast to much existing research on chief justices in the states, this study weighs their extrajudicial responsibilities rather than intracourt leadership. By assessing the content of State of the Judiciary remarks delivered over a period of sixty years, Vining and Wilhelm are able to analyze the reform agendas advanced by chief justices and determine what factors influence the likelihood of success. These analyses confirm that chief justices engage with state politics in meaningful ways and that reactions to their proposals are influenced by ideological congruence with other political elites and the scope of their requests. Administering Justice also examines the chief justice position as an institution, provides a collective profile of its occupants, and surveys growing diversity among court leaders.
Keywords
Law; Political Science; American StudiesISBN
9780472903696, 9780472076307Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
http://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2023Classification
Jurisprudence and general issues
Local government law
Regional, state and other local government
Legal systems: courts and procedures
Legal systems: judges and judicial powers