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Article
Judging Under Political Pressure: An Empirical Analysis of Constitutional Review Voting in the Spanish Constitutional Court
Journal of Law, Economics and Organization (2013)
  • Nuno Garoupa, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • Fernando Gomez, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
  • Veronica Grembi
Abstract
In this paper we study the extent to which decisions by the Spanish Constitutional Court are explained by political variables. Our theory proposes that party alignment should play an important role in explaining the behavior of the Spanish constitutional judges, but with some limitations given the institutional constraints faced by the court. Therefore, we do not propose pure party alignment but a more sophisticated strategy approach based on the interaction between the advancement of ideological goals with the limitations imposed essentially by the civil law tradition of consensual courts. Using a unique dataset of abstract review cases in 1980-2006, we conclude that the patterns of political influence in the Spanish Constitutional Court are complex and cannot be easily framed merely as the pure reflection of the attitudinal model, and of left/right alignment.
Keywords
  • Constitutional Court,
  • Spain,
  • judicial independence,
  • party politics,
  • ideology
Disciplines
Publication Date
2013
Citation Information
Nuno Garoupa, Fernando Gomez and Veronica Grembi. "Judging Under Political Pressure: An Empirical Analysis of Constitutional Review Voting in the Spanish Constitutional Court" Journal of Law, Economics and Organization Vol. 29 Iss. 3 (2013) p. 513 - 534
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/nunogaroupa/58/