“Packing the Courts: Ideological Proximity and Expansions to the Federal Judiciary from 1937 to 2012” (with Elli Menounou, Adam Feldman, and Thora Giallouri), Journal of Law and Courts 7(1): 81-106, 2019. “The Mask of Neutrality: Judicial Partisan Calculation and Legislative Redistricting,” Law & Policy 41(3): 336-359, 2019. “Economic Frames Cause Elected Officials to Liberalize Their Racial Attitudes” (with Christian R.
“No Vacancy or Open for Business? Making Accommodations for Digital-Platform Short-Term Rentals in Major American Municipalities” (with Braedon Sims), University of Hawai’i Law Review 43(1): 123-165, 2021. “The Private Interests of Public Officials: Financial Regulation in the U.S.
Texas,” Missouri Law Review, forthcoming. “The Walking Dead: How the Criminal Regulation of Sodomy Survived Lawrence v. “Mobilization and Counter-Mobilization: The Effect of Candidate Visits on Campaign Donations in the 2016 Presidential Election” (with Boris Heersink and Brenton Peterson), Journal of Politics, forthcoming. “The Personal Finances of United States Supreme Court Justices and Decision-Making in Economic Litigation” (with Thora Giallouri and Elli Menounou), Journal of Legal Studies, forthcoming. Website: Teaching and Research InterestsĪmerican political and legal institutions regulation and adjudication representation. His research has been or is slated to be published in peer-reviewed journals and law reviews such as the Journal of Politics, Political Research Quarterly, the Journal of Legal Studies, the Journal of Law & Courts, Legislative Studies Quarterly, State Politics & Policy Quarterly, Law & Policy, the Journal of Historical Political Economy, Politics & Gender, the Missouri Law Review, and the University of Hawai‘i Law Review. Likewise, his work considers how party and ideology explain ostensibly administrative decision-making in legal, political, and electoral institutions, and studies the impact of economic representation in courts and adjudicatory bureaucratic institutions on the development of regulatory policy.
Broadly speaking, his research examines political and legal institutions, regulation as a component of the policy process, and intergovernmental relations, as well as how institutional design affects the formulation and implementation of public policy. He then went on to compare her to the “twisted” Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland because of her answer on her religious beliefs.Jordan Carr Peterson is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public and International Affairs at North Carolina State University. He said in looking up Badham he saw that she had been described as a “Twitter queen”. To actually recap the rest of that one lecture would also take much longer than this piece, so stay tuned for a follow-up story.īut among all of his thoughts, he did take aim at two panellists specifically, one of them being author and commentator Van Badham. “It went all right, there was no nasty surprises, we had a civil discussion.” He said the minute format worked against the kind of thought necessary to have necessary discussion.
“Answers that take decades - thousands of years - I can’t expect a TV show to allow you years.” “There’s something downright sinful about answering a really complex question in a minute,” he said. Picture: ABCĭr Peterson’s guest appearance and the “drama” it attempted to create has been recapped here, but what he was most frustrated with was the one-minute time frame panellists had to answer. Dr Peterson said he found his time on ABC's Q&A on Monday night rather dreadful.