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In These Estimable Courts Damon Cann and Jeff Yates explore how
citizens feel about the government institutions at the front lines
of jurisprudential policy-making in America - our nation's state
and local courts. The book's central focus concerns a primary
question of governance - why do people support and find legitimate
the institutions that govern their lives? Cann and Yates evaluate
the factors that drive citizens' support for their state and local
courts and that influence peoples' perceptions of the proper role
of these courts in our society, as well as how judicial
policy-making should be made. A viable democracy depends upon
citizen belief in the legitimacy of government institutions.
Nowhere is this more evident than in judicial institutions. Courts
depend heavily on a reservoir of public good will and institutional
legitimacy to get their decrees obeyed by the public and
implemented by other policy actors. It enables courts to weather
the storm of counter-majoritarian decisions and remain effective
governing bodies whose edicts are respected and followed. These
Estimable Courts takes advantage of new original survey data to
evaluate citizens' beliefs about the legitimacy of state courts as
well as a number of important related concerns. These include
peoples' views concerning how judges decide cases, the role of
judges and courts in policy-making, the manner in which we select
judges, and finally, the dynamics of citizens' views regarding
compliance with the law and legal institutions.
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