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Assessing the Impact of State Judicial Structures on Citizen Litigiousness
Jeff Yates1*,
Holley Tankersley2,
and
Paul Brace3
1 Binghamton University, New York
2 Coastal Carolina University, Conway, South Carolina
3 Rice University, Houston, Texas
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jyates{at}binghamton.edu.
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Abstract |
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Some researchers argue over the existence of a "litigation explosion," while others seek to understand the causes of variation in citizen legal mobilization and rates of litigation among states. Existing studies have provided important insight into citizens propensity to invoke the state courts to settle disputes; however, there remain unresolved questions concerning state litigation rates. The authors argue that the structural aspects of state judicial systems, specifically the professionalism of the courts and method of judicial selection, have important implications for litigiousness. They further suggest that the effects of these institutional structural characteristics are conditioned on the political environment of the state in which they operate. The authors consider tort litigation rates in ten states over twenty years to assess the proposition that these institutional structural characteristics of state court systems affect state citizen legal mobilization, expressed as litigation rates.
First published on June 11, 2009 Political Research Quarterly 2009, doi:10.1177/1065912909336271

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