Posted by James L. Gibson, guest-blogging:
Does Knowing What’s Under the Judicial Hood Threaten the Supreme Court’s 
Legitimacy? Part 1. 
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_19-2009_07_25.shtml#1248251592


   According to the theory of positivity bias (Gibson and Caldeira,2009,
   Citizens, Courts, and Confirmations) the institutional legitimacy of
   the U.S. Supreme Court is enhanced by exposure to the legitimizing
   symbols of law � robes, deference, temples, etc.

   But do these symbols teach an erroneous view of how judges make
   decisions? Judicial symbolism is often associated with Mechanical
   Jurisprudence and the view that judges merely implement laws adopted
   by others, and Mechanical Jurisprudence is a powerful source of
   legitimacy for unaccountable institution like the Supreme Court. So
   the question to consider is whether increased knowledge of the Supreme
   Court is associated with increased legal realism (Pound 1908), and
   whether citizens who are legal realists extend support to the Supreme
   Court.

   More specifically, does acknowledging that the justices of the U.S.
   Supreme Court rely upon their own values in making decisions on cases
   before the Court destroy the �Myth of Legality� ��the belief that
   judicial decisions are based on autonomous legal principles� and �that
   cases are decided by application of legal rules formulated and applied
   through a politically and philosophically neutral process of legal
   reasoning� (Scheb and Lyons 2000, 929)� and thereby threaten the
   Court�s legitimacy? If the American people knew the truth about the
   decision-making process on the Supreme Court (truth = Legal Realism),
   then would they still be willing to extend institutional support to
   the Court?

   Although these questions seem rather simple to resolve, in fact little
   extant empirical research has attempted to provide answers, and, more
   generally, the views of the American people are likely more
   complicated than simply specifying the answer as �yes, they rely on
   their own values, and are therefore not legitimate� or �no, they
   follow the law, ignoring their own values, and therefore are
   legitimate.� Moreover, the empirical literature presents us with some
   important puzzles and unexplained findings and processes.

   From existing research on public attitudes toward law and courts, we
   do know that, generally, to know more about courts is to hold them in
   higher esteem. This finding seems to hold in many parts of the world
   (e.g., Gibson, Caldeira, and Baird 1998). But this simple empirical
   relationship is far from simple to understand. Presumably, those who
   know more about courts know more about the realities of how courts
   actually operate and how judges actually make decisions, and therefore
   they accept some version of the Legal Realism.

   But the conundrum is that scholars typically assume that the
   legitimacy of judicial institutions can best be sustained by the �Myth
   of Legality,� or some theory of mechanical jurisprudence. Thus, to the
   extent that increased awareness of courts is associated with a more
   realistic understanding of how courts and judges make decisions, and
   to extent that the realist reality is that judges are policy makers
   who rely upon their own values in making decisions, awareness should
   be negatively correlated with institutional support, not positively
   correlated. That positive correlations are so routinely found must
   indicate some sort of break in the presumed causal chain. Either
   knowledge does not produce a realistic understanding of decision
   making, or legitimacy may not depend upon citizens being duped into
   believing in theories of mechanical jurisprudence and the myth of
   legality.

   The nature of these interrelationships is crucially important for many
   sorts of issues confronting the judiciary today. For instance, is it
   possible to discuss openly judges as policy makers without threatening
   judicial legitimacy? Many seem to assume that acknowledging the
   policy-making role of judges undermines perceptions of legitimacy and
   judicial impartiality � as, for examples, in the minority viewpoint on
   the U.S. Supreme Court in the case of Republican Party of Minnesota v.
   White (which extended free speech rights to candidates for judicial
   office, allowing them to debate public policy issues during their
   quests for judicial office); or in the unwillingness of nominees to
   the federal bench to discuss their policy views during confirmation
   hearings. Most generally, can we hold honest and sincere discussions
   of judges and judicial decision making without impugning the
   legitimacy of courts in general and the Supreme Court in particular?
   To what degree is the legitimacy of the Supreme Court grounded in a
   myth that seems to become more unsustainable with every passing year?

   Greg Caldeira and I have prepared a paper analyzing this question (see
   the �Segal and Spaeth� paper at
   http://polisci.wustl.edu/sub_page.php?s=3&m=0&d=7 ). That paper
   investigates the relationships among knowledge of the Supreme Court,
   beliefs about the nature of judicial decision-making, and willingness
   to ascribe legitimacy to the Supreme Court as an institution. The
   theoretical framework for this analysis is the well-known Legitimacy
   Theory.

   In brief, that theory asserts that: (1) courts are uncommonly
   dependent upon legitimacy because they have few institutional means of
   ensuring compliance with their decisions (no purses, no swords); (2)
   courts value legitimacy highly because legitimacy includes a
   presumption that decisions, even unpopular ones, ought to be accepted
   and complied with; and (3) legitimacy depends upon the courts not
   being viewed as just another political institution; instead,
   legitimacy requires that citizens distinguish between what it is that
   judges do and what other politicians do.

   At the empirical level, we consider four questions: (1) does knowledge
   increase institutional support, (2) does institutional support depend
   on belief in the myth of legality, (3) to what view of judging do the
   most knowledgeable subscribe, and (4) is the knowledge � support
   relationship mediated by distinctive views of how judges go about
   making decisions?

   We think it reasonable to hypothesize that greater exposure to courts
   is associated with a more realistic view of how courts and judges
   actually operate. Exposure to courts should be associated with the
   understanding that judges have discretion available to them when they
   render their decisions, that the process of decision-making involves
   far more than �applying� the law to the facts in a mechanical or
   syllogistic fashion, and that judging inevitably involves and
   implicates the personal values of judges. To know more about courts is
   to know that collegial courts like the Supreme Court often, if not
   typically, render divided and, on occasion, deeply and bitterly
   divided, decisions. If judges cannot agree on what the law is, then
   belief in a process of mechanical jurisprudence is difficult to
   sustain.

   Paradoxically, however, the limited evidence we have indicates that
   greater political knowledge is associated with a less realistic view
   of how courts actually operate. For instance, long ago, Casey (1974)
   demonstrated that the more one knows about law and courts, the more
   one is likely to believe in the theory of mechanical jurisprudence.
   Something about being exposed to information about courts contributes
   to people embracing this traditional mythology of judicial decision
   making.

   This paradox is all the more interesting in cross-institutional
   perspective. Hibbing and Theiss-Morse (1995) have shown, for instance,
   that greater awareness of the Supreme Court leads to more support for
   it, whereas greater awareness of Congress is associated with less
   support for that institution. When people are exposed to judicial
   institutions, they apparently learn more than a single lesson: They
   may understand that the court has made a decision in favor of (or
   opposed to) their interests. But they also learn something about the
   institution itself. Given the dense syndrome of legitimizing symbols
   courts employ, it is not surprising that this exposure enhances the
   institutional legitimacy.

   But do Americans actually subscribe to a mythical view of judicial
   decision making? The evidence is not entirely clear. Baird and Gangl
   (2006) investigate this hypothesis, although their analysis is based
   upon the judgments of college students. They posit that perceptions of
   legalistic decision-making enhance the perceived fairness of the
   decision-making process, a key underpinning of judicial legitimacy. In
   their experiment, they used media reports to try to convince the
   students that a Court decision was based more on political than legal
   considerations.

   Unfortunately, but tellingly, the experiment failed on this score,
   with a majority of the students believing that the justices followed
   legalistic considerations even when told about the role of ideological
   factors. Although this result limits the value of the experiment, the
   finding does demonstrate the powerful framing effects of the belief in
   legalistic decision making and how deeply embedded it is among the
   political beliefs of many Americans. In the end, their analysis also
   demonstrates that greater belief in the myth of legality is associated
   with greater perceptions of fairness.

   Baird and Gangl also report an unexpected finding for which they have
   no explanation. Perceptions of legalistic decision making enhance
   fairness judgments, but perceptions of political decision making do
   not detract from fairness. Political decision making is portrayed in
   their experiment by the belief that the �members of the Court engaged
   in bargaining and compromise to reach this decision.� Whether the
   student believed that bargaining was involved had no impact on
   perceived procedural fairness.

   We suspect that the reason for this finding lies in the
   conceptualization employed by Baird and Gangl. They clearly postulate
   an unidimensional continuum ranging from legalistic to political
   decision making. Legalistic refers to relying upon the law in making
   decision; political decision making involves bargaining and
   compromise.

   What Baird and Gangl did not appreciate, however, is that two forms of
   political decision making exist: principled and strategic. Bargaining
   and compromise can be principled; this process of decision making can
   focus on real issues and legitimate ideological and legal
   disagreement. But bargaining and compromise can also be strategic,
   especially when the actors are attempting to maximize their self
   interest (e.g., political ambition) rather than reach a negotiated
   solution to the issue at hand. We hypothesize that to the extent that
   the American people view discretionary and ideologically based
   decision making as principled, those views will not undermine the
   Supreme Court�s legitimacy.

   This then leads to the puzzle with which this paper is concerned:
   Greater attention to courts is most likely associated with greater
   exposure to legitimizing symbols and therefore with enhanced judicial
   legitimacy. But, greater exposure is also associated with a more
   realistic view of judicial decision making, a view emphasizing
   discretion and policy making, and that view tends to undermine
   judicial legitimacy. Reconciling this paradox is important for
   developing a more thorough understanding of citizen beliefs about the
   judiciary.

   Logically, then, extant research findings can only be explained by two
   processes. First, most people must know little about the Court and
   therefore accept the myth of legality, which leads to the ascription
   of legitimacy. Or, second, knowing more about the Court must produce
   beliefs about judicial decision making that do not undermine the
   legitimacy of courts. Thus, one of the most important questions this
   research seeks to answer is whether institutional support is
   undermined by holding a realistic understanding of the role of
   discretion and values-based decision making when it comes to the U.S.
   Supreme Court.

   References Baird, Vanessa A., and Amy Gangl. 2006. �Shattering the
   Myth of Legality: The Impact of the Media�s Framing of Supreme Court
   Procedures on Perceptions of Fairness.� Political Psychology 27 (#4):
   597-614. Casey, Gregory 1974. �The Supreme Court and Myth: An
   Empirical Investigation.� Law and Society Review 8 (Spring): 385-419.
   Gibson, James L., and Gregory A. Caldeira. 2009. Citizens, Courts, and
   Confirmations: Positivity Theory and the Judgments of the American
   People. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Gibson, James L.,
   Gregory A. Caldeira, and Vanessa Baird. 1998. �On the Legitimacy of
   National High Courts.� American Political Science Review 92 (#2,
   June): 343-358. Hibbing, John R., and Elizabeth Theiss-Morse. 1995.
   Congress as Public Enemy: Public Attitudes Toward American Political
   Institutions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pound, Roscoe.
   1908. �Mechanical Jurisprudence.� Columbia Law Review 8
   (December):605-623. Scheb, John M., II, and William Lyons. 2000. �The
   Myth of Legality and Public Evaluation of the Supreme Court.� Social
   Science Quarterly 81 (#4, December): 928-940.

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