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The Maintenance of Institutional Legitimacy in Supreme Court Justices’ Public Rhetoric

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2022

Colin Glennon
Affiliation:
East Tennessee State University
Logan Strother*
Affiliation:
Purdue University
*
Contact the corresponding author, Logan Strother, at lstrothe@purdue.edu.

Abstract

Judicial politics scholars routinely posit that the behavior of Supreme Court justices is motivated in important part by concerns of institutional maintenance, that is, by a desire to maintain the Court’s unusually large store of institutional legitimacy. Previous work on this topic, however, has focused almost exclusively on the influence of such motivation on judicial decision making. We contend that if institutional maintenance is an important goal, it should be observable in other contexts as well. We examine televised mass-media interviews with Supreme Court justices from 1998 to 2016 and find that legitimacy reinforcement is the predominant goal reflected in justices’ rhetoric in those interviews.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2019 by the Law and Courts Organized Section of the American Political Science Association. All rights reserved.

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Footnotes

The authors thank Chris Krewson, Mikel Norris, and the anonymous reviewers for many helpful comments and suggestions.

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