Dan Martin Katz and collaborators at the Computational Legal Studies
have a pretty rich visualization of S Ct citations for the first
thirty years of opinions, they may have something interesting to say
here and possibly could even quantify the number of (non)citations
like Bush v. Gore... here's some HD eye candy of the first thirty
years work:
http://computationallegalstudies.com/2010/11/07/the-development-of-structure-in-the-citation-network-of-the-united-states-supreme-court-%e2%80%94-now-in-hd-repost/
On Saturday, December 4, 2010, <rick.hasen@lls.edu> wrote:
Thanks. I am still looking for a case that whose case name and citation was never uttered again for any proposition in a supreme court opinion.
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
-----Original Message-----
From: "Smith, Brad" <BSmith@law.capital.edu>
Sender: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu
Date: Fri, 03 Dec 2010 23:59:47
To: Election Law<election-law@mailman.lls.edu>
Subject: Re: [EL] query re Bush v. Gore and Supreme Court precedent
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