Are courts “different?” Experimental evidence on the unique costs of attacking courts

A. Driscoll, M. J. Nelson
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Abstract

U.S. courts have long been thought to be held in special regard by the American public, and public support is theorized to protect institutions from interbranch aggression. At the same time, recent research underscores that institutional fealty and public reaction to court curbing is shaped by partisan concerns. Drawing on a survey experiment fielded in the U.S., we evaluate whether (1) the public is uniquely punitive toward incumbents who seek to undermine a court rather than an agency and (2) the extent to which these penalties are dependent upon shared partisanship with the proposer. We demonstrate that the public is less supportive of efforts to strip judicial power than analogous efforts to strip power from an executive agency, but that this penalty for court curbing dissipates in the face of copartisanship. This substantiates previous claims regarding the role of partisanship on shaping public attitudes about high courts but underscores that the American public may still hold the courts in unique regard.
法院“不同吗?”攻击法院的独特成本的实验证据
长期以来,美国法院一直被认为受到美国公众的特别重视,公众的支持被认为是为了保护机构免受部门间的侵犯。与此同时,最近的研究强调,机构忠诚度和公众对法院限制的反应受到党派担忧的影响。根据在美国进行的一项调查实验,我们评估了(1)公众是否会对试图破坏法院而不是机构的现任者进行独特的惩罚;(2)这些惩罚在多大程度上取决于与提议者的共同党派关系。我们证明,与剥夺行政机构权力的类似努力相比,公众不太支持剥夺司法权的努力,但这种对法院遏制的惩罚在合作关系面前消散了。这证实了先前关于党派关系在塑造公众对高等法院的态度方面的作用的说法,但强调了美国公众可能仍然对法院持有独特的看法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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