调卷令的“奇数党出局”理论

Adam Bonica, Adam Chilton, M. Sen
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引用次数: 4

摘要

最高法院是否以及为什么同意审理案件是美国政治中最重要的话题之一,也是研究得最透彻的话题之一。然而,现有的理论忽略了一个关键角色:倡导者。我们开发并测试了一种新的理论,明确地将辩护人纳入最高法院可能接受的案件解释中。具体来说,我们的理论是,当(1)反对的倡导者之间存在很大的意识形态距离,(2)下级法院小组在意识形态上与在下级法院获胜的倡导者最接近时,证书请愿最可能成功。正如我们所解释的那样,在这些案件中,请求最高法院干预的辩护人变成了“奇数党出局”,这是一个暗示,传达了有关偏见可能性和案件政治重要性的重要信息。我们使用一个关于律师和法官的身份和意识形态的新数据集来测试这一理论。我们的理论得到了强有力的支持:当向法院上诉的辩护律师是意识形态上的异类时,也就是说,当请愿人反对意识形态上一致的被告和下级法院小组时,确认请愿更有可能被批准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The 'Odd Party Out' Theory of Certiorari
Whether and why the Supreme Court agrees to hear cases is among the most important—and well studied—topics in American politics. However, existing theories have overlooked a key player: the advocates. We develop and test a new theory that explicitly incorporates advocates in explaining which cases the Supreme Court is likely to accept. Specifically, we theorize that cert petitions are most likely to be successful when (1) there is great ideological distance between the opposing advocates and (2) the lower-court panel is closest ideologically to the advocate who won at the lower-court level. In these cases, as we explain, the advocate petitioning the Supreme Court to intervene becomes the “Odd Party Out,” a cue that conveys important information about the probability of bias as well as the political importance of the case. We test this theory using a new dataset on the identities and ideologies of advocates and judges. We find strong support for our theory: cert petitions are significantly more likely to be granted when the advocate appealing to the Court is an ideological outlier—that is, when the petitioner is in opposition to an ideologically aligned respondent and lower-court panel.
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