Book contents
- The Rights Paradox
- The Rights Paradox
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Table of Cases
- 1 Legitimacy and Minority Rights
- 2 The Group Antipathy Theory of Supreme Court Legitimacy
- 3 Under Siege
- 4 Opening the Floodgates
- 5 Experimental Tests of the Group Antipathy Model
- 6 How Citizens Use Groups to Evaluate Judicial Preferences
- 7 Group Antipathy and Strategic Behavior on the Supreme Court
- 8 Conclusion
- Appendix
- References
- Index
2 - The Group Antipathy Theory of Supreme Court Legitimacy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 March 2021
- The Rights Paradox
- The Rights Paradox
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Table of Cases
- 1 Legitimacy and Minority Rights
- 2 The Group Antipathy Theory of Supreme Court Legitimacy
- 3 Under Siege
- 4 Opening the Floodgates
- 5 Experimental Tests of the Group Antipathy Model
- 6 How Citizens Use Groups to Evaluate Judicial Preferences
- 7 Group Antipathy and Strategic Behavior on the Supreme Court
- 8 Conclusion
- Appendix
- References
- Index
Summary
Brown v. Board of Education and Green v. New Kent County established the lengths to which the Supreme Court would go to safeguard the rights of African Americans. In the years after Brown, when the justices took a dim view of “specific benefits enjoyed by white students [that] were denied to Negro students of the same educational qualifications,” the Court became a strong guardian of civil rights.1 But even as they fortified Equal Protection guarantees, the justices had very real reason to fear for the health of their institution. Fewer than one in four Southerners approved of the Brown ruling throughout the decade that followed, and a vast majority objected to sending their children to integrated schools (Rosenberg 2008, 127). From Virginia’s massive resistance campaign to the election of pro-segregation, anti-Court governors throughout the South, Brown sparked a firestorm. Statements like that from Governor Ross Barnett of Mississippi – who spat that he would “rot in a federal jail before he will let one nigra cross the sacred threshold of our white schools” (Sarratt 1966, 7) – did not just exemplify displeasure with a Court ruling. They showed citizens questioning the basic authority of the institution itself.
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- The Rights ParadoxHow Group Attitudes Shape US Supreme Court Legitimacy, pp. 11 - 33Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021