390 likes | 584 Views
Researching United States Supreme Court Justices. Law 590-202 Senior Seminar (Supreme Court Decisions) June 29, 2006 James E. Duggan. Why is it important?. Knowing a justice’s background may give you insight into how the justice thinks…
E N D
Researching United States Supreme Court Justices Law 590-202 Senior Seminar (Supreme Court Decisions) June 29, 2006 James E. Duggan
Why is it important? • Knowing a justice’s background may give you insight into how the justice thinks… • If you know what arguments a justice responds to, you can prepare briefs and oral arguments in an influential way. • Unlike juries, you cannot usually pick a court bench. But, you should think how the court views all aspects of your case as you would a jury.
Potential Predictors of Judicial Decisions • How have justices ruled in the past? What alliances have justices formed? • How have justices responded to arguments? • What questions have justices asked in oral arguments? • How have justices responded to briefs? • What have justices said in speeches? Other writings? Interviews?
Potential Predictors of Judicial Decisions • Biographical Information • Nomination/Confirmation Battles • What has been written about the justice • Political Science Studies/Supreme Court Forecasting Project • Personal Connections/Anecdotal Information/Blogs
Getting Started: Researching the Supreme Court • Martin & Goehlert, How to Research the Supreme Court (CQ, 1992) • Stern, Gressman, Shapiro & Geller: Supreme Court Practice, 8th ed. (CQ, 2002) • Epstein, Segal, Spaeth & Walker, The Supreme Court Compendium: Data, Decisions & Development, 2nd. Ed (CQ: 1996)
Getting Started: Researching the Supreme Court • Paddock, Facts about the Supreme Court of the United States (H.W. Wilson & Co., 1996) • Bader & Mersky, The First One Hundred Eight Justices (W.S. Hein & Co., 2004)
Getting Started: Researching the Supreme Court • Lambert, U.S. Supreme Court Research-Select Internet Sites (on LLRX) • Official U.S. Supreme Court Website
How Have Justices Ruled in the Past? • Search for their opinions on LexisNexis & Westlaw • LexisNexis: Use Segment Search: Opinionby, Writtenby, Dissentby, Concurby • Westlaw: Use Field Search: JU (judge), CON (Concurring), DIS (dissenting) • Remember to search for opinions prior to service on Supreme Court; may also want to search for cases they argued as attorneys
What Alliances Have Justices Formed? • LexisNexis and Westlaw Search: Look at who joins the justice in the opinion (concurrence, dissent, etc.) • Look at commentary about Court in newspapers, legal journals, etc. • See postings on SCOTUSblog (linked from SIU Law Library webpage)
Justices: Oral Arguments & Responses • Look at texts of oral arguments: • http://www.supremecourtus.gov/ • Official transcript proceedings before the Supreme Court of the United States [SIU microform] • May it please the court [sound recording] : the most significant oral arguments made before the Supreme Court since 1955 • OYEZ-U.S. Supreme Court Multimedia
Briefs • LexisNexis & Westlaw • http://www.supremecourtus.gov/ • http://www.abanet.org/publiced/preview/home.html • Landmark briefs and arguments of the Supreme Court of the United States (SIU) • U. S. Supreme Court records and briefs [microform]
Speeches, Writings, Interviews • Check Index to Legal Periodicals & WilsonWeb • Checks News files on both LexisNexis & Westlaw • See Partin’s Supreme Court Research Guide & Bibliography • Book Example: Sandra Day O’Connor, The Majesty of the Law (Random House, 2003) • Historically, locate papers collections (generally at major universities) • Library of Congress Resources (ex: Alito)
Biographical Information • Friedman and Israel, The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions (Vol. V, Chelsea House, 1995) • The American Bench: Judges of the Nation • Almanac of the Federal Judiciary • Be careful, though…
Biography Examples • Andrew Peyton Thomas, Clarence Thomas: a Biography (Encounter Books, 2001) • Nancy Maveety, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor: Strategist on the Supreme Court (Rowan & Littlefield, 1996) • Kevin A. Ring, ed., Scalia Dissents : Writings of the Supreme Court's Wittiest, Most Outspoken Justice (Regnery, 2004)
Nomination/Confirmation Battles • Lots of information surfaces at a confirmation hearing: • Newspaper/Media files (LexisNexis/Westlaw) • Mersky & Jacobstein, The Supreme Court of the United States : hearings and reports on successful and unsuccessful nominations of Supreme Court Justices by the Senate Judiciary Committee, 1916-1993 (W.S. Hein & Co, 1993-1995).
Nomination/Confirmation Battles • A Field Guide to the Alito Confirmation Hearings • http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1136541915440 • Gearing Up for the Alito Confirmation Hearings: Documents Fuel the Debate • http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/law_librarian_blog/2006/01/gearing_up_for__1.html • Alito Coverage from the Law Professor Blogs Network • http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/law_librarian_blog/2006/01/alito_coverage_.html
Nomination/Confirmation Battles • Searchable Version of John Roberts Confirmation Hearings and Court Opinions • http://www.asksam.com/ebooks/JohnRoberts/confirmation_hearing.asp • Background Information for Senate Confirmation of John Roberts • http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/law_librarian_blog/2005/09/background_info.html • Parsing John Roberts • http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/law_librarian_blog/2005/08/parsing_john_ro.html
About the Justice: Books, Articles, etc. • Use various indexes/databases to search for materials: • OCLC First Search • Library Catalogs • Periodical Indexes (ILP, LegalTrac, WilsonWeb, etc.) • Silverburg, Index to Law School Theses & Dissertations (W.S. Hein & Co., 1995) • Comprehensive Dissertation Index (Law & Political Science; Social Sciences and Humanities)
About the Justice: Books, Articles, etc. Examples • Epstein & Knight, The Choices Justice Make (CQ Press, 1998) • Johnson, Oral Arguments and Decision Making on the United States Supreme Court (SUNY Press, 2004) • Cooper & Ball, The United States Supreme Court: From the Inside Out (Prentice Hall, 1996)
About the Justice: Books, Articles, etc. Examples • Perry, “The Supremes”: Essays on the Current Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States (Peter Lang, 1999) • Clayton & Gillman, Supreme Court Decision Making: New Institutionalist Approaches (University of Chicago Press, 1999)
About the Justice: Books, Articles, etc. Examples • Segal & Spaeth, The Supreme Court and the Attitudinal Model Revisited (Cambridge University Press, 2002) • Savage, Turning Right: The Making of the Rehnquist Supreme Court (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1992).
Political Science Studies/Forecasting Models • See Morris Library’s Social Science Indexes for political science journal articles, etc.
Personal Connections/Anecdotal Information/Blogs • Who do you know? • Clerks/other Employees • Attorneys who have argued before the Supreme Court • Who can you hire? • Georgetown’s Supreme Court Institute
Blogs • The Rutherford Institute Court Watch • About U.S. Politics: Supreme Court • Judicial Confirmation Network