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PAUL
BRACE, MELINDA GANN HALL, and LAURA LANGER
Place State Supreme Courts in State Politics
This essay
places state supreme courts in state politics by tracking some of the
major lines of research on these important institutions, documenting the
importance of state supreme courts, and illustrating important variations
among state supreme courts on a host of factors, including docket composition,
the exercise of judicial review, litigant patterns, and turnover rates.
Through analyses of original data on separation-of-powers relationships
in the abortion controversy, it also provides a brief empirical demonstration
of how courts influence and are influenced by the political and policy
processes operating in the states, and how comparative research helps
resolve fundamental controversies in political science. We conclude that
there is a remarkable and unfortunate asymmetry between the political
importance of state supreme courts and the attention given to them by
the research community. Moreover, by capitalizing on the analytical advantages
of comparative state judicial politics scholarship, scholars will be able
to solve some of the most complex puzzles in the study of state politics.
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