Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2022
Recent research reveals judicial tendencies to decide cases more conservatively during times of war. Building on studies in political psychology, we use the observed movement in favor of increased security versus liberty in times of war on the courts to investigate differences in how liberals and conservatives are motivated by threat concerns. We find that war mainly conditions decision making by liberal judges in criminal and civil liberties cases. The results furthermore suggest that ideological differences play little role in wartime decision making for civil liberties cases.
We are grateful to Donald Songer for his guidance, and we would like to thank Amy Steigerwalt, David Klein, and the anonymous reviewers for providing insightful comments and feedback. Replication data are available at the JLC Dataverse (http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/TB0H02).