Judicial Conflicts and Voting Agreement: Evidence from Interruptions at Oral Argument

Tonja Jacobi, K. Rozema
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This Article asks whether observable conflicts between judges in a case—interruptions between Supreme Court justices during oral arguments—are associated with future breakdowns in voting agreement among the judges in the case. To do so, we built a dataset containing justice-to-justice interruptions in cases between 1960 to 2015, and employ a framework for measuring case outcomes that treats the outcomes as a set of agreements and disagreements between pairs of justices. We find that on average a judicial pair is 7 percent less likely to vote together in a case for each interruption that occurs in the case between the judicial pair in the oral argument. While a conflict between judges that leads to both interruptions and a breakdown in voting of the coalition is one possible explanation of the finding, it is not the only; an interruption could instead just reflect something about cases that are more prone to disagreement or something about the way the interrupting justice views the case. We set out an empirical strategy that isolates the conflict explanation from these and other possible explanations and find that the conflict inherent in interruptions explains over half of the relationship between interruptions and disagreement.
司法冲突与表决一致:来自口头辩论中断的证据
本文探讨的是,在一个案件中,法官之间可观察到的冲突——最高法院法官在口头辩论期间的中断——是否与案件中法官之间投票协议的未来破裂有关。为此,我们建立了一个数据集,其中包含1960年至2015年间案件中司法对司法的中断,并采用了一个框架来衡量案件结果,该框架将结果视为一对法官之间的一系列协议和分歧。我们发现,在一个案件中,法官在口头辩论中每出现一次中断,他们一起投票的可能性就会降低7%。法官之间的冲突导致联合政府的投票中断和崩溃,这可能是对这一结果的一种解释,但并不是唯一的解释;相反,打断可能只是反映了更容易产生分歧的案件,或者是打断的法官看待案件的方式。我们提出了一种经验策略,将冲突解释从这些和其他可能的解释中分离出来,发现中断中固有的冲突解释了中断和分歧之间一半以上的关系。
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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