SOC-PHDATA-ANMLOct 17, 2012

Justice blocks and predictability of US Supreme Court votes

arXiv:1210.4768v152 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the predictability of judicial behavior for legal and political analysis, though it is incremental as it applies existing network methods to a new domain.

The study tackled the problem of predicting U.S. Supreme Court justices' votes using social network methods, finding that these methods are more accurate than expert forecasts and content-based algorithms, with deviations from ideal independence most apparent in 5-4 decisions.

Successful attempts to predict judges' votes shed light into how legal decisions are made and, ultimately, into the behavior and evolution of the judiciary. Here, we investigate to what extent it is possible to make predictions of a justice's vote based on the other justices' votes in the same case. For our predictions, we use models and methods that have been developed to uncover hidden associations between actors in complex social networks. We show that these methods are more accurate at predicting justice's votes than forecasts made by legal experts and by algorithms that take into consideration the content of the cases. We argue that, within our framework, high predictability is a quantitative proxy for stable justice (and case) blocks, which probably reflect stable a priori attitudes toward the law. We find that U. S. Supreme Court justice votes are more predictable than one would expect from an ideal court composed of perfectly independent justices. Deviations from ideal behavior are most apparent in divided 5-4 decisions, where justice blocks seem to be most stable. Moreover, we find evidence that justice predictability decreased during the 50-year period spanning from the Warren Court to the Rehnquist Court, and that aggregate court predictability has been significantly lower during Democratic presidencies. More broadly, our results show that it is possible to use methods developed for the analysis of complex social networks to quantitatively investigate historical questions related to political decision-making.

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