Author:
Hausegger Lori,Riddell Troy
Abstract
This paper investigates the relationship between
diffuse support for the Canadian Supreme Court (general, lasting
attachments to the institution) and specific support (attitudes toward
its policy outputs). We hypothesize that diffuse support for the Court
will not be closely related to specific support until after 1988, when
the Court began making a number of controversial decisions. Using data
from 1987 and 1997 we test multivariate models of the determinants of
diffuse support and discover that it is indeed correlated more with
democratic norms than with attitudes toward specific policies in 1987,
while the reverse is true in 1997. The fact that support for the Court
now appears to be more closely tied to its outputs could have important
political implications for the Court and its decisions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
13 articles.
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