Becker, Theodore L.1970. Comparative judicial politics: The political functions of courts. Chicago: Rand McNally .
2.
Bickel, Alexander M.1986. The least dangerous branch: The Supreme Court at the bar of politics. 2nd ed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
3.
Chávez, Rebecca Bill.2004. The rule of law in nascent democracies: Judicial politics in Argentina. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
4.
Cichowski, Rachel.2000. Western dreams, Eastern realities: Support for the European Union in Central and Eastern Europe. Comparative Political Studies33:1243-78.
5.
Clayton, Cornell.1999. The court as an idea, not a building or a game. In Supreme Court decision-making: New institutional approaches. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
6.
Della Porta, Donatella.2001. A judges’ revolution? Political corruption and the judiciary in Italy. European Journal of Political Research39:1-21.
7.
Dotan, Yoav, and Menachem Hofnung .2005. Legal defeats- Political wins: Why do elected representatives go to court? Comparative Political Studies38:75-103.
8.
Epp, Charles R.1996. Do bills of rights matter? The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. American Political Science Review90:765-79.
9.
Epp, Charles R.1998. The rights revolution: Lawyers, activists, and supreme courts in comparative perspective. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
10.
Feeley, Malcolm M., and Edward L. Rubin .1998. Judicial policy making and the modern state: How the courts reformed America’s prisons. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
11.
Finkel, Jodi.2003. Supreme Court decisions on electoral rules after Mexico’s 1994 judicial reform: An empowered court. Journal of Latin American Studies35:777-99.
12.
Finkel, Jodi.2008. Judicial reform as political insurance: Argentina, Peru and Mexico. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
13.
Galanter, Marc.1984. Competing equalities: Law and the backward classes in India. New York: Oxford University Press.
14.
Gargarella, Roberto, Pilar Domingo, and Theunis Roux, eds. 2006. Courts and social transformation in new democracies: An institutional voice for the poor?London: Ashgate.
15.
Garrett, Geoffrey, and Barry R. Weingast .1993. Ideas, interests, and institutions: Constructing the European Community’s internal market. In Ideas and foreign policy: Beliefs, institutions, and political change, ed. Judith Goldstein and Robert O. Keohane.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
16.
Gavison, Ruth.1998. The constitutional revolution: A reality or self-fulfilling prophecy?Jerusalem: The Israel Democracy Institute (Hebrew).
17.
Geertz, Clifford.1973. Religion as a cultural system. In Anthropological approaches to the study of religion, ed. Michael Banton.New York: Routledge .
18.
Ginsburg, Tom.2003. Judicial review in new democracies: Constitutional courts in Asian cases. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
19.
Ginsburg, Tom.2008. The global spread of constitutional review. In The Oxford handbook on law and politics, ed. Keith Whittington, Daniel Kelemen, and Gregory Caldeira.New York : Oxford University Press.
20.
Ginsburg, Tom, and Tamir Moustafa.2008. Rule by law: The politics of courts in authoritarian regimes. New York: Cambridge University Press.
21.
Goldstein, Judith, and Robert O. Keohane .1993. Ideas and foreign policy: Beliefs, institutions, and political change. Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press.
22.
Gauri, Varun, and Daniel M. Brinks, eds. 2008. Courting social justice: Judicial enforcement of social and economic rights in the developing world . New York: Cambridge University Press.
23.
Guarnieri, Carlo, and Patrizia Pederzoli2002. The power of judges: A comparative study of courts and democracy. New York: Oxford University Press.
24.
Helmke, Gretchen.2005. Courts under constraints: Judges, generals, and presidents in Argentina. New York: Cambridge University Press.
25.
Helmke, Gretchen, and Frances Rosenbluth .2009. Regimes and the rule of law: Judicial independence in comparative perspective. Annual Review of Political Science12:345-66.
26.
Hilbink, Lisa.2007. Judges beyond politics in democracy and dictatorship: Lessons from Chile. New York: Cambridge University Press.
27.
Hilbink, Lisa.2009. The origins of positive judicial independence. Paper delivered at the Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 11-14.
28.
Hirschl, Ran.1998. Israel’s "constitutional revolution": The legal interpretation of entrenched civil liberties in an emerging neo-liberal economic order. American Journal of Comparative Law46:427.
29.
Hirschl, Ran.2004. Towards juristocracy: The origins and consequences of the new constitutionalism. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
30.
Hirschl, Ran.2008. The judicialization of mega-politics and the rise of political courts. In The Oxford handbook on law and politics, ed. Keith Whittington, Daniel Kelemen, and Gregory Caldeira.New York: Oxford University Press.
31.
James, Patrick E., Donald Abelson, and Michael Lusztig2002. The myth of the sacred: The Charter, the courts and the politics of the constitution in Canada. Montreal, Canada: McGill-Queen’s University Press .
32.
Kapiszewski, Diana.2007. Challenging decisions: High court power in Argentina and Brazil. Unpublished PhD diss., University of California , Berkeley.
33.
Klug, Heinz.2000. Constituting democracy: Law, globalism, and South Africa’s political reconstruction. New York: Cambridge University Press.
34.
MacCormick, Neil.1999. Rhetoric and the rule of law. In Recrafting the rule of law: The limits of legal order, ed. David Dyzenhaus, 163-77. Portland, OR: Hart Publishing.
35.
Malleson, Kate, and Peter H. Russell .2006. Appointing judges in an age of judicial power: Critical perspectives from around the world. Toronto, Canada: University of Toronto Press.
36.
Maravall, Jose Maria, and Adam Przeworski .2003. Democracy and the rule of law. New York: Cambridge University Press.
37.
Moustafa, Tamir.2007. Mobilising the law in an authoritarian state: The legal complex in contemporary Egypt. New York: Cambridge University Press.
38.
Murphy, Walter F., and Joseph Tanenhaus .1972. The study of public law. New York: Random House.
39.
Osiel, Mark J.1995. Dialogue with dictators: Judicial resistance in Argentina and Brazil. Law and Social Inquiry20 (2): 481-60.
40.
Ríos-Figueroa, Julio.2006. Judicial independence: Definition, measurement, and its effects on corruption. An analysis of Latin America. Dissertation manuscript , New York University.
41.
Russell, Peter H., and David M. O’Brien, eds. 2001. Judicial independence in the age of democracy: Critical perspectives from around the world. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.
42.
Sathe, S.P.2003. Judicial activism in India: Transgressing borders and enforcing limits. 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press.
43.
Scheppele, Kim Lane.2003. Constitutional ethnography: An introduction. Law and Society Review38:389-406.
44.
Scheppele, Kim Lane.2005. democracy by judiciary. or, why courts can be more democratic than parliaments. In Rethinking the rule of law after communism , ed. Adam Czarnota, Martin Krygier, and Wojciech Sadurski.Budapest, Hungary: Central European University Press.
45.
Schubert, Glendon A., and David J. Danelski, eds. 1969. Comparative judicial behavior: Cross-cultural studies of political decision-making in the East and West. New York: Oxford University Press.
46.
Shapiro, Martin.1964. Law and politics in the Supreme Court: New approaches to political jurisprudence. Glencoe, IL: Free Press.
47.
Shapiro, Martin.1981. Courts: A comparative political analysis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
48.
Sieder, Rachel, Line Schjolden, and Alan Angell.2005. The judicialization of politics in Latin America. New York: Palgrave Macmillan .
49.
Smulovitz, Catalina.1995. Constitución y Poder Judicial en la Nueva Democracia Argentina. In La Nueva Matriz Política Argentina, compiled by Carlos H. Acuña. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Nueva Visión.
50.
Staton, Jeffrey K.2004. Judicial policy implementation in Mexico City and Mérida . Comparative Politics37:41-60.
51.
Staton, Jeffrey K. Forthcoming. Judicial power and strategic communication in Mexico. New York: Cambridge University Press.
52.
Stone Sweet, Alec.2000. Governing with judges: Constitutional politics in Europe . New York: Oxford University Press .
53.
Tate, Neal C., and Torjborn Vallinder .1995. The global expansion of judicial power. New York: New York University Press.
54.
Tocqueville, Alexis de.1969. Democracy in America. Edited by J. P. Mayer.New York: HarperCollins .
55.
Unger, Roberto.1976. Law in modern society. New York: Free Press.
56.
Vanberg, Georg.2005. The politics of constitutional review in Germany. New York: Cambridge University Press.
57.
Whittington, Keith, Daniel Kelemen, and Gregory Caldeira, eds. 2008. The Oxford handbook on law and politics. New York: Oxford University Press.
58.
Widner, Jennifer A.2001. Building the rule of law: Francis Nyalai and the road to judicial independence in Africa. New York: Norton.
59.
Wilson, Bruce M., and Juan Carlos Rodríguez Cordero.2006. Legal opportunity structures and social movements: The effects of institutional change on Costa Rican politics. Comparative Political Studies39 (3): 325-51.
60.
Woods, Patricia J.2005. Cause lawyers and judicial community in Israel: Legal change in a diffuse, normative community. In The worlds cause lawyers make: Structure and agency in legal practice, ed. Austin Sarat and Stuart Scheingold.Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
61.
Woods, Patricia J.2008. Judicial power and national politics: Courts and gender in the religious-secular conflict in Israel. State University of New York Series in Israel Studies. Albany: State University of New York Press.