Judicial hierarchy and discursive influence

Author:

Herron Felix1,Carlson Keith2,Rockmore Daniel N.23,Livermore Michael A.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sorbonne Université, Paris 75006, France

2. Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755, USA

3. The Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA

4. University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22902, USA

Abstract

We apply a dynamic influence model to the opinions of the US federal courts to examine the role of the US Supreme Court in influencing the direction of legal discourse in the federal courts. We propose two mechanisms for how the Court affects innovation in legal language: a selection mechanism where the Court's influence primarily derives from its discretionary jurisdiction, and an authorship mechanism in which the Court's influence derives directly from its own innovations. To test these alternative hypotheses, we develop a novel influence measure based on a dynamic topic model that separates the Court's own language innovations from those of the lower courts. Applying this measure to the US federal courts, we find that the Supreme Court primarily exercises influence through the selection mechanism, with modest additional influence attributable to the authorship mechanism. This article is part of the theme issue ‘A complexity science approach to law and governance’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Reference26 articles.

1. The Impact of Supreme Court Activity on the Judicial Agenda

2. The Selection of Disputes for Litigation

3. Probabilistic topic models

4. Blei DM Lafferty JD. 2006 Dynamic topic models. In Proc. 23rd Intl Conf. on Mach. Learn (ICML ‘06) pp. 113-120.

5. Gerrish SM Blei DM. 2010 A language-based approach to measuring scholarly impact. In Proc. 27th Intl. Conf. on Mach. Learn. (ICML ‘10) pp. 375-382.

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