Elements of Judicial Strategy |
|
Author:
| Murphy, Walter F. |
Foreword by:
| Epstein, Lee Knight, Jack |
ISBN: | 978-1-61027-356-5 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2016 |
Publisher: | Quid Pro, LLC
|
Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $29.99 |
Book Description:
|
New paperback edition of a classic work of law and political science, adding a new foreword by Lee Epstein and Jack Knight. This foundational book is presented to a new generation of thoughtful observers of the U.S. Supreme Court and how its justices create judicial decisions. As Epstein and Knight write, this book is "extraordinary. It's the rarest of rare: a breakthrough of the path-marking, even paradigm-shifting, variety...." Its publication offered a "huge conceptual breakthrough....
More DescriptionNew paperback edition of a classic work of law and political science, adding a new foreword by Lee Epstein and Jack Knight. This foundational book is presented to a new generation of thoughtful observers of the U.S. Supreme Court and how its justices create judicial decisions. As Epstein and Knight write, this book is "extraordinary. It's the rarest of rare: a breakthrough of the path-marking, even paradigm-shifting, variety...." Its publication offered a "huge conceptual breakthrough. Elements was the first to offer a strategic account" of judging, and its "framework forever changed the study of judicial behavior." It remains influential to current thought, extending even in its "global reach," and is an important part of modern social sciences and law. First outlining the sources and instruments -- and limitations -- of judicial power, the author then shows how policy-oriented justices might take advantage of their power positions to maximize their impact on the formation and execution of public policy. In this book Walter F. Murphy attempts to understand how, under the limitations which the American legal and political systems impose, Supreme Court justices can legitimately act to further their policy objectives. Murphy also considers ethical issues raised by the model of judicial decision-making he describes. Throughout, systematic analysis is supported by prodigious research and fascinating real-world examples over the years and in very different judicial administrations. Part of the Legal Legends Series from Quid Pro Books, this edition embeds the page numbers of the original print editions, for purposes of continuity, referencing, course assignment, and convenience to the reader.