The Two Faces of Judicial Power: Dynamics of Judicial-Political Bargaining
β Scribed by Benjamin G. Engst
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β¦ Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Contents
List ofΒ Figures
List ofΒ Tables
1 The Two Faces of Judicial Power
1.1 (Non-)Decisions as a Means of Judicial Power
1.1.1 Judicial Choices and Their Implications
1.1.2 The First Face of Judicial Power
1.1.3 The Second Face of Judicial Power
1.2 Approach of This Book
1.3 Chapter Outline
Notes
References
2 The Judicial-Policy-Dialogue Game
2.1 The Sequences of the Judicial-Policy-Dialogue Game
2.1.1 The Government as an Actor
2.1.2 The Court as an Actor
2.1.3 Additional Modeling Choices
2.2 Strategies in Equilibrium
2.2.1 The Government's Final Choice
2.2.2 The Court's Choice
2.2.3 The Government's Initial Choice
2.3 Implications and Hypotheses
2.3.1 Simulating the Judicial-Policy-Dialogue Game
2.3.2 Hypotheses from the Judicial-Policy-Dialogue Game
2.4 Uncertainty in the Government's Initial Choice
2.5 Autolimitation and Legal Signals
2.5.1 Judicial Power Through Past Decisions
2.5.2 Autolimitation and Intra-parliamentary Deals
2.6 Summary
Notes
References
3 Judicial Power in Germany and the European Union
3.1 The German Federal Constitutional Court
3.1.1 The Institutional Design of the GFCC
3.1.2 The Key Legal Procedures of the GFCC
3.1.3 The Political Branches and the GFCC
3.2 The Power of the GFCC in a European Comparison
3.3 The Power of the GFCC and the Parental Custody Reform
3.4 Summary
Notes
References
4 The First Face of Judicial Power
4.1 The Context of the Empirical Assessment
4.2 Operationalizing the First Face of Judicial Power
4.2.1 Dependent Variable: Judicial Choices
4.2.2 Independent Variables: The Government's and the Court's Costs
4.2.2.1 External Aspects Driving the Government's Costs
4.2.2.2 Internal Aspects Driving the Government's Costs
4.2.2.3 The Court's Costs from an Evasion
4.2.3 Control Variables: Alternative Explanations for Judicial Choices
4.3 Modeling Judicial Choices to Assess the First Face of Judicial Power
4.4 Empirical Assessment of the First Face of Judicial Power
4.4.1 Costs as an Explanation for Judicial Choices
4.4.2 The Government's Costs and Judicial Choices
4.4.3 The Court's Costs and Judicial Choices
4.5 Understanding Nuances of the First Face of Judicial Power
4.6 Showing the First Face of Judicial Power
4.7 Summary
Notes
References
5 The Second Face of Judicial Power
5.1 The Second Face of Judicial Power in a Causal Inference Framework
5.2 Operationalizing the Second Face of Judicial Power
5.2.1 Dependent Variable: Policy Shift
5.2.2 Independent Variable: Legal Signal
5.2.3 Control Variables: Alternative Explanations for a Policy Shift
5.3 Modeling Choices to Assess Policy Shifts
5.4 Empirical Assessment of the Second Face of Judicial Power
5.4.1 Findings from the Analyses of the Second Face of Judicial Power
5.4.2 Robustness of the Findings on the Second Face of Judicial Power
5.5 Summary
Notes
References
6 Conclusion: Implications of Judicial Power
6.1 Linking the Two Faces of Judicial Power
6.2 Contributions of This Study
6.3 Implications for the Judicialization Hypothesis
6.4 Avenues for Further Research
Note
References
Appendix A: Judicial Choices in Comparison
Appendix B: The Judicial-Policy-Dialogue Game
Appendix C: Judicial Power in Germany and the EU
C.1 Hierarchical Cluster Analysis
C.2 Robustness of the Indices on the Two Faces of Judicial Power
Appendix D: The First Face of Judicial Power
D.1 Validation of the Government's Topic of Highest Interest
D.2 Assessment of the Variables
D.3 Empirical Assessment of the First Face of Judicial Power
D.4 Concluding Analysis Varying Costs Simultaneously
D.5 Logistic Regression to Assess the First Face of Judicial Power
D.6 Opinion Clarity by Costs
Appendix E: The Second Face of Judicial Power
E.1 Assessment of the Variables
E.2 Logistic Regression to Assess the Second Face of Judicial Power
E.3 Robustness Excluding the 16th Legislative Period
E.4 Robustness with Stemmed Words Excluding Stop Words
E.5 Robustness Using a Stricter Legal Signal
Index
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