Worldviews and Judicial Decision Making at the U.S. Supreme Court

24 September 2024, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed at the time of posting.

Abstract

The Attitudinal Model asserts that U.S. Supreme Court justices decide cases based on their political ideologies. Many judicial politics scholars regard this model as the most powerful in predicting how the justices will vote on a case. There exist many attempts to define political ideologies. The least complex definition is that they are systems of ideas.Political ideologies, nonetheless, are not the only system of ideas. Worldviews are another, and their impact on political decision making remains largely unexplored. This exploratory paper examines the affect that the personal worldviews of the justices have on their court rulings using a qualitative analysis. To assess the impact of worldview, this study categorized ten justices into five dimensions of worldview articulated by Anthropologist Clyde Kluckhohn with personal memoirs written by the justices. This study then sought linkages with the justices’ categorizations and their decisions in significant cases. Some interesting connections were discovered.

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