2014
DOI: 10.1080/0098261x.2014.936193
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The Supply of Amicus Curiae Briefs in the Market for Information at the U.S. Supreme Court

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Cited by 12 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…To date, studies that examine amici have largely focused on the types of organizations that submit briefs, at what stage of the legal process they submit, how much they participate, how often they are on the winning side, and why these interest groups submit briefs (e.g., Caldeira & Wright, 1990;Collins, 2008;Hansford & Johnson, 2014;Segal, 1988;Zuber, Sommer, & Parent, 2015). In addition to informing a court, amici file briefs for a variety of reasons including influencing public discourse, signaling the importance of an issue, responding to an organization's membership, or even increasing the visibility of an organization (Simpson & Vasaly, 2015).…”
Section: Categories Of Amicimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To date, studies that examine amici have largely focused on the types of organizations that submit briefs, at what stage of the legal process they submit, how much they participate, how often they are on the winning side, and why these interest groups submit briefs (e.g., Caldeira & Wright, 1990;Collins, 2008;Hansford & Johnson, 2014;Segal, 1988;Zuber, Sommer, & Parent, 2015). In addition to informing a court, amici file briefs for a variety of reasons including influencing public discourse, signaling the importance of an issue, responding to an organization's membership, or even increasing the visibility of an organization (Simpson & Vasaly, 2015).…”
Section: Categories Of Amicimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, some law clerks admit that justices read amicus briefs selectively, focusing their attention only on the those that passed the initial review by law clerks (Lynch : 45). Therefore, despite the justices' lack of information about the policy and legal implications of a case (Bailey et al ; Epstein and Knight ; Hansford and Johnson ; Maltzman et al ), time constraints and the huge workload may prevent them from carefully examining all information in amicus briefs.…”
Section: The Limits Of Persuasive Informationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, each of the assumptions underlying signaling theory can be applied to amicus filers more generally. Members of the court necessarily act in an environment of incomplete information with regard to many aspects of the cases before them (Goelzhauser and Vouvalis ; Hansford and Johnson ). In contrast, brief filers often possess precious information about the legal and policy implications of potential decisions that the justices need in order to render decisions in line with their preferences (Bailey et al : 74–75).…”
Section: Signaling Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Amicus curiae briefs play an important role in the dissemination of information. Supreme Court justices have incomplete information (Epstein and Knight 1998, 1999; Hansford and Johnson 2014; Johnson, Wahlbeck, and Spriggs 2006; Maltzman, Spriggs, and Wahlbeck 2000; Murphy 1964). They don’t always know the preferences of other actors, the wider implications of their rulings, or how their policies will play out.…”
Section: Sending a Signal: State Amicus Coalitions And Supreme Court mentioning
confidence: 99%