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Courts and Judicial Policymaking by Christopher P. Banks - Kent State University; David M. O’Brien - The University of Virginia Publisher: Longman Copyright Year: 2008 Publishing Date: 2006/12/18 eText ISBN-10: 0-13-613303-7 | eText ISBN-13: 978-0-13-613303-2 | Print ISBN-10: 0-13-144349-6 | Print ISBN-13: 978-0-13-144349-5 |
Pages: 384 ABOUT THIS TITLE - TABLE OF CONTENTS | | |
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ABOUT THIS TITLE - DESCRIPTION | | For courses in courts and the judicial
process; and law and society. The scope of its coverage, and its
high academic quality, makes it attractive for graduate courses as
well.
Christopher P. Banks and David M.
O'Brien wrote Courts and Judicial Policymaking to
fill a need for a comprehensive textbook on law and judicial
policymaking. The text provides a fresh perspective on the
contemporary politics of law, courts, the legal profession, and
judicial policymaking, often with an underlying comparative
judicial process perspective. It covers four distinct areas: 1)
What is law?; 2) How are courts organized and how do they work
procedurally?; 3) What influences court access and, ultimately,
judicial decision-making?; and, 4) How do courts make policy, and
how is judicial authority constrained? It has relevant and
contemporary analyses of literature from the political science and
legal fields; and analyses from scholars who argue from the
quantitative (attitudinal and strategic models) and the qualitative
(new institutionalism) perspectives. It contains up-to-date charts
and graphs on the organization of courts and trends in litigation,
caseloads, and opinion writing, and it is appropriate for
undergraduate and graduate classes.
Feedback includes:
“The book is extremely well written
and organized, one of the smoothest textbooks I have read in terms
of readability. The tables provided are a major selling point for
the book – nicely summarize complex and often confusing
materials." – Roger Handberg, University of Central
Florida
“The best feature of this manuscript
is its thorough coverage of the subject matter as well as the
in-depth analysis of specific topics and questions addressed in the
boxed material and sidebars. Adding a comparative dimension by
looking at the judicial systems and procedures of other countries
is also quite novel.” – Susan Mezey, Loyola University,
Chicago |
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