Chapter 9
Chapter 9/10
Chapter 10
100

Types of Judicial Opinions

1. Majority

2. Plurality

3. Per Curiam

4. Concurring

5. Dissenting

6. Seperate

100

"Stare Decisis"

Dictates that courts should not overturn past decisions unless there is a "special reason" to do so.

100

Affirmative Action

a policy or a set of procedures that improve the educational/employment opportunities of certain demographic groups

200

Attitudinal Model

Judicial decisions are based on the ideological attitudes and policy preferences of the justices. 

200

2 methods of constitutional interpretation

1. Interpretivism

2. Non-interpretivism

300

Strategic Choice Theory

Judges base their decisions on strategic calculations that are tempered by legal factors and institutional constraints. 

300

Activist Court

Linked to rulings that deviate or overturn precedents or legislation

400

Reasoning by example or analogy 3 stages

1. Recognize similarity between a past case and the case under review

2. Discover a rule of law from the prior case

3. Apply the rule to the case at hand

400

Judicially self-restrained court

adheres to precedents

500

Precedent

a court decision that serves as authority for similar future cases

500

Equity lawsuits vs Adequacy lawsuits

Equity lawsuits pushed for the elimination of wealth disparities, adequacy lawsuits sought school reforms based on academic performance