HERESTHETICAL MANEUVERING ON THE U.S. SUPREME
COURT
Published in 2002. Journal of Theoretical
Politics 14 (1): 93-122
Lee Epstein
Olga Shvetsova
Can an apparent loser snatch victory out of the jaws of
defeat? This question occupied the attention of the late
William H. Riker during the last ten years of his career, and
it is one that he answered in the affirmative: By constructing
choice situations in order to manipulate outcomes losers can
become winners, and vice versa. Riker even coined a term,
"heresthetics," to describe this "art of political
manipulation." But is Riker's rather large body of work the
"idiosyncratic" product of a "singular genius" or can it serve
as the "foundation of a new theory of politics?" Scholars have
recently raised this question, and not unreasonably so, for
Riker's theory of heresthetics has yet to gain a serious
foothold into the political science literature.
We develop a game-theoretic model, which enables leaders-in our
case, Chief Justices -to engage in heresthetical manipulations.
From this model, we deduce propositions about the circumstances
that would lead them to invoke heresthetical devices, as well
as the particular strategies we would expect them to employ.
Finally, we explore the propositions against data amassed from
the private papers of two former justices. Our results indicate
that Riker's work was not the "idiosyncratic" product of a
"singular genius" but rather can serve as the "foundation of a
new theory of politics."
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