Culture and Legal Policy Punctuation in the Supreme Court’s Gender Discrimination Cases

Policy Studies Journal, Forthcoming.

47 Pages Posted: 2 Apr 2013 Last revised: 29 Jun 2014

Date Written: February 16, 2014

Abstract

For the most part, punctuated equilibrium scholarship has ignored the legal policy change generated by the Supreme Court. In this study, I address this gap though an examination of the Court’s equal protection and gender cases from the 1970s. My case study here has two aims. First, I offer the concept of jurisprudential regimes as a useful device for framing and identifying legal policy punctuations. After identifying Reed v. Reed (1971) as the cutpoint of such a regime, I then use Reed and its progeny to illustrate the promise of culture in explaining stasis and change, specifically focusing on the concepts of cultural cognition and cultural surprise.

Suggested Citation

Robinson, Robert R., Culture and Legal Policy Punctuation in the Supreme Court’s Gender Discrimination Cases (February 16, 2014). Policy Studies Journal, Forthcoming., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2242942 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2242942

Robert R. Robinson (Contact Author)

Cal State Fullerton ( email )

800 N State College St
Fullerton, CA 92831
United States

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