Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Study of Judicial Behavior and the Disciplline of Political Science, by Nancy Maveety
Part 1: The Attitudinal Pioneers
Chapter 2: C. Herman Pritchett: Innovator with an Ambiguous Legacy, by Lawrence Baum
Chapter 3: Glendon Schubert: The Judicial Mind, by Jeffrey A. Segal
Chapter 4: S. Sidney Ulmer: The Multidimensionality of Judicial Decision Making, by Robert C. Bradley
Chaptre 5: Harold J. Spaeth: The Supreme Court Computer, by Sara C. Benesh
Chapter 6: Joseph Tanenhaus: The “Learned Discipline” of Public Law, by Robert A. Carp
Chapter 7: Beverly Blair Cook: The Value of Eclecticism, by Lee Epstein and Lynn Mather
Part 2: The The Strategic Pioneers
Chapter 8: Walter F. Murphy: The Interactive Nature of Judicial Decision Making, by Lee Epstein and Jack Knight
Chapter 9: J. Woodford Howard Jr.: Fluidity, Strategy, and Analytical Synthesis in Judicial Studies, by Nancy Maveety and John Anthony Maltese
Chapter 10: David J. Danelski: Social Psychology and Group Choice, by Thomas G. Walker
Chapter 11: David Rohde: Rational Choice Theorist, by Saul Brenner
Part 3: The Historical-Institutionalist Pioneers
Chapter 12: Edward S. Corwin as Public Scholar, by Cornell W. Clayton
Chapter 13: Alpheus Thomas Mason: Piercing the Judicial Veil, by Sue Davis
Chapter 14: Robert G. McCloskey, Historical Institutionalism, and the Arts of Judicial Governance, by Howard Gillman
Chapter 15: Robert Dahl: Democracy, Judicial Review, and the Study of Law and Courts, by David Adamany and Stephen Meinhold
Chapter 16: Martin Shapiro: Anticipating the New Institutionalism, by Herbert M. Kritzer
Afterword
Contributors
Index