2006
DOI: 10.1017/s0003055406062034
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The Influence of Oral Arguments on the U.S. Supreme Court

Abstract: W e posit that Supreme Court oral arguments provide justices with useful information that influences their final votes on the merits. To examine the role of these proceedings, we ask the following questions: (1) what factors influence the quality of arguments presented to the Court; and, more importantly, (2) does the quality of a lawyer's oral argument affect the justices' final votes on the merits? We answer these questions by utilizing a unique data source--evaluations Justice Blackmun made of the quality o… Show more

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Cited by 133 publications
(192 citation statements)
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“…The effect of ideology is so ubiquitous that it influences the justices' decision making in a host of contexts, including the Court's agenda setting (e.g., Perry 1991), the justices' receptivity to oral arguments (e.g., Johnson, Wahlbeck, and Spriggs 2006), the treatment of litigant briefs (e.g.,…”
Section: H2: Lower Court Opinions That Are Published Are More Likely mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The effect of ideology is so ubiquitous that it influences the justices' decision making in a host of contexts, including the Court's agenda setting (e.g., Perry 1991), the justices' receptivity to oral arguments (e.g., Johnson, Wahlbeck, and Spriggs 2006), the treatment of litigant briefs (e.g.,…”
Section: H2: Lower Court Opinions That Are Published Are More Likely mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, we add to the mounting evidence that scholars must understand the entire decision-making process in order to have the most accurate picture of how actors decide. In particular, we add to the literature that demonstrates justices' behavior during the oral argument phase of this process plays a key role in signaling the decisions they will ultimately make (Johnson, Wahlbeck, and Spriggs 2006). Third, we speak to the debate concerning how justices' preferences over case outcomes affect their decisions.…”
Section: T Hroughout David Friedman's Argument In Mccreary V Aclu (2mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…On this account, oral arguments influence case outcomes because they give justices an opportunity to clear up lingering questions from the briefs and to gauge their colleagues' views (Johnson 2004;Wasby, D'Amato, and Metrailer 1976). Research also demonstrates the quality of arguments influences justices' decisions (Johnson, Wahlbeck, and Spriggs 2006;McGuire and McAtee 2007).…”
Section: The Role Of Oral Arguments In Supreme Court Decision Makingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It therefore follows that there ought to be an association between rankings and outcomes. We know, for example, that judges' evaluations of lawyers' performances in particular cases are predictive of appellate outcomes (Johnson et al, 2006), which warrants the idea that judges' evaluations of lawyers' performances in general ought to be predictive in the same way.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The literature in political science has concentrated on appellate outcomes, which can in most cases be reduced to a binary variable (either the appeal succeeds or it does not), and which has employed indirect measures of lawyer quality (for example: Justice Blackmun's letter grades assigned to counsel at oral argument (Johnson et al, 2006) or experience (Haynie and Sill, 2007) or senior counsel status (Szmer et al, 2007) or past record (Hanretty, 2013)) to test whether better counsel win more appeals. A more general literature in empirical legal studies has focused on continuous outcomes, sometimes monetary outcomes in personal injury cases (Moorhead et al, 1994;Rosenthal, 1974) but more often sentence lengths in criminal trials, where the stakes are particularly high for clients (Abrams and Yoon, 2007;Shinall, 2010).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%