The Courts in American Public Culture
Author(s)
Silbey, Susan S.
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In American public imagination, courts are powerful but also impotent. They are guardians of citizens' rights but also agents of corporate wealth; simultaneously the least dangerous branch and the ultimate arbiters of fairness and justice. After recounting the social science literature on the mixed reception of courts in American public culture, this essay explains how the contradictory embrace of courts and law by Americans is not a weakness or flaw, nor a mark of confusion or naïveté. Rather, Americans' paradoxical interpretations of courts and judges sustain rather than undermine our legal institutions. These opposing accounts are a source of institutional durability and power because they combine the historical and widespread aspirations for the rule of law with a pragmatic recognition of the limits of institutional practice; these sundry accounts balance an appreciation for the discipline of legal reasoning with desires for responsive, humane judgment.
Date issued
2014-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Anthropology Program; Sloan School of ManagementJournal
Daedalus
Publisher
MIT Press
Citation
Silbey, Susan S. “The Courts in American Public Culture.” Daedalus 143, no. 3 (July 2014): 140–156. © 2014 The MIT Press.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
0011-5266
1548-6192