Experts in Crime: The Effect of an Exclusively Criminal Docket on Judicial Behavior
Document Type
Presentation
Presentation Date
1-7-2009
Abstract or Description
Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association
Scholars of state courts and judicial behavior have shown that variations in the institutional environment and political context in which judging occurs can significantly alter voting behavior. Here we focus on how the composition of a court's docket can alter behavior. In this paper we use a potential outcomes framework to exploit a unique institutional configuration in the Texas and Oklahoma Criminal Courts of Appeal dockets: exclusive and singular criminal jurisdiction. Using multivariate matching, we control for a host of potentially confounding factors and estimate the effect of docket composition on judicial choice. We find that the two state supreme courts with unique jurisdictions behave differently than do state supreme courts with more diverse dockets.
Sponsorship/Conference/Institution
Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association
Location
New Orleans, LA
Recommended Citation
Miller, Banks, DIno P. Christenson, Brett W. Curry.
2009.
"Experts in Crime: The Effect of an Exclusively Criminal Docket on Judicial Behavior."
Department of Political Science and International Studies Faculty Presentations.
Presentation 256.
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/poli-sci-facpres/256
Additional Information
Link to Abstract: https://convention2.allacademic.com/one/spsa/spsa09/index.php?click_key=1#search_top