Judicial Agenda Setting Through Signaling and Strategic Litigant Responses

Abstract

The purpose of this Essay is to present the theory and empirical evidence that strategic interaction between litigants and Justices transforms the U.S. Supreme Court’s agenda. More specifically, it proposes that Supreme Court Justices shape the Court’s agenda by providing signals to litigants about the sort of cases they would like to see, and litigants consider those signals when deciding whether or not to pursue a given case.

Keywords

Judicial process, Judicialization of politics, Empirical analysis, Judicial signaling

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Authors

Vanessa Baird (University of Colorado School of Law)
Tonja Jacobi (Northwestern University)

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