1: The Supreme Court: The Least Understood Branch
2: The Selective Nature of Supreme Court Justices
3: Steps in the Decision-Making Process
4: Day to Day in the Life of the Court
5: A Psychological Analysis of Decision Formation
6: The Rational-Choice Model in Judicial Decision Making
7: The Bush v. Gore Decision
8: How Individual Justices Affect Decisions
9: The Chief Justice: More Influential than Other Justices?
10: Can the Court's Decisions Be Predicted?
11: Evaluating the Process
References
Author Index
Subject Index
"This book is a one-of-a-kind treat for social scientists, legal
scholars, and interested lay people. By drawing on an array of
empirical data sources, Professor Wrightsman has offered an
insightful and provocative analysis of decision making in the U.S.
Supreme Court-the "least understood branch."-- Saul Kassin,
Massachusetts Professor of Psychology, Williams College
"Lawrence Wrightsman has written a stunningly useful book about the
way the Supreme Court worksThis book should be ready not only by
lawyers and social scientists, but by anyone who wants to be
informed about how judges carry out their duties to interpret and
make law. It is the only work that combines insights from
psychological, political, and legal sources in studying the
institution that some say is the true "sovereign" of the United
States."-- Christopher
Slobogin, Stephen C. O'Connell Professor of Law, University of
Florida Fredric G. Levin College of Law
"In The Psychology of the Supreme Court, Larry Wrightsman has
succeeded in discovering and explaining how the entire institution
of the Supreme Court ticks - its personal dynamics, its
decision-making process, its foibles and its idiosyncrasies. He has
given us a fresh and vitally important perspective on the inner
workings of the nation's highest court - and on the nine humans who
are its justices."-- Tony Mauro, Supreme Court Correspondent,
Legal
Times, American Lawyer Media, and Law
"In the wake of the controversial nomination of Harriet Miers,
confirmation hearings for new Justices, the Terri Shiavo case, and
the lingering effects of Bush v. Gore, the Supreme Court has
captured the public's attention as never before. Just in time,
Professor Lawrence Wrightsman provides a fascinating account of how
nine opinionated experts with clashing perspectives apparently work
together behind closed portals. His social science-based
explanations of the Court's decision making tell a compelling
story, and his readable style brings to life even the most complex
set of facts and decisions."-- Edie Greene, Co-author of
Determining Damages: The
Psychology of Jury Awards, Co-author of Psychology and the Legal
System
"In light of the recent turnover and media hype surrounding the
Supreme Court, Wrightsman's book could not be timelier. This
scholarly analysis by the dean of psychology and law researchers
examines the predictability of justices' voting patterns, offers
insightful profiles of individual justices, and is chock full of
useful information on everything from the nomination and
confirmation processes, to how the Court selects and decides cases.
It will appeal to
anyone interested in how these nine individuals reach the decisions
that profoundly influence all of our lives."-- Brian H. Bornstein,
Professor of Psychology and Law, University of Nebraska
"This book is a one-of-a-kind treat for social scientists, legal
scholars, and interested lay people. By drawing on an array of
empirical data sources, Professor Wrightsman has offered an
insightful and provocative analysis of decision making in the U.S.
Supreme Court-the "least understood branch."-- Saul Kassin,
Massachusetts Professor of Psychology, Williams College
"Lawrence Wrightsman has written a stunningly useful book about the
way the Supreme Court worksThis book should be ready not only by
lawyers and social scientists, but by anyone who wants to be
informed about how judges carry out their duties to interpret and
make law. It is the only work that combines insights from
psychological, political, and legal sources in studying the
institution that some say is the true "sovereign" of the United
States."-- Christopher
Slobogin, Stephen C. O'Connell Professor of Law, University of
Florida Fredric G. Levin College of Law
"In The Psychology of the Supreme Court, Larry Wrightsman has
succeeded in discovering and explaining how the entire institution
of the Supreme Court ticks - its personal dynamics, its
decision-making process, its foibles and its idiosyncrasies. He has
given us a fresh and vitally important perspective on the inner
workings of the nation's highest court - and on the nine humans who
are its justices."-- Tony Mauro, Supreme Court Correspondent,
Legal
Times, American Lawyer Media, and Law
"In the wake of the controversial nomination of Harriet Miers,
confirmation hearings for new Justices, the Terri Shiavo case, and
the lingering effects of Bush v. Gore, the Supreme Court has
captured the public's attention as never before. Just in time,
Professor Lawrence Wrightsman provides a fascinating account of how
nine opinionated experts with clashing perspectives apparently work
together behind closed portals. His social science-based
explanations of the Court's decision making tell a compelling
story, and his readable style brings to life even the most complex
set of facts and decisions."-- Edie Greene, Co-author of
Determining Damages: The
Psychology of Jury Awards, Co-author of Psychology and the Legal
System
"In light of the recent turnover and media hype surrounding the
Supreme Court, Wrightsman's book could not be timelier. This
scholarly analysis by the dean of psychology and law researchers
examines the predictability of justices' voting patterns, offers
insightful profiles of individual justices, and is chock full of
useful information on everything from the nomination and
confirmation processes, to how the Court selects and decides cases.
It will appeal to
anyone interested in how these nine individuals reach the decisions
that profoundly influence all of our lives."-- Brian H. Bornstein,
Professor of Psychology and Law, University of Nebraska
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