One Supreme Court

Supremacy, Inferiority, and the Judicial Department of the United States

James E Pfander author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:4th Jun '09

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

One Supreme Court cover

Despite over two hundred years of experience with constitutional government, much remains unclear about the power of the political branches to curtail or re-define the judicial power of the United States. Uncertainty persists about the basis on which state courts and federal agencies may hear federal claims and the degree to which federal courts must review their decisions. Scholars approach these questions from a range of vantage points and have arrived at widely varying conclusions about the relationship between congressional and judicial power. Deploying familiar forms of legal analysis, and relying upon a new account of the Court's supremacy in relation to lower courts and tribunals, James Pfander advances a departmental conception of the judiciary. He argues that Congress can enlist the state courts, lower federal courts, and administrative agencies to hear federal claims in the first instance, but all of these tribunals must operate within a hierarchical framework over which the "one supreme Court" identified in the Constitution exercises ultimate supervisory authority. In offering the first general account of the Court as department head, Pfander takes up such important debates in the federal courts' literature as Congress's power to strip the federal courts of jurisdiction to review state court decisions, its authority to assign decision-making authority to state courts and non-Article III tribunals, its control over the doctrine of vertical stare decisis, and its ability to craft rules of practice for the federal system.

This is a sophisticated and important study of the federal courts, * Richard A. Paschal, The Journal of Politics *

ISBN: 9780195340334

Dimensions: 155mm x 236mm x 31mm

Weight: 615g

328 pages