Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-m9kch Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-08T09:47:52.631Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Do Preliminary References Increase Public Support for European Law? Experimental Evidence from Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2024

Sivaram Cheruvu*
Affiliation:
School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, USA
Jay N. Krehbiel
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, West Virginia University, Morgantown, USA
*
*Corresponding author. Email: sivaram.cheruvu@utdallas.edu

Abstract

Explanations for the successful expansion and consolidation of the European Union and its legal system have long emphasized the importance of domestic courts’ sending preliminary references to the Court of Justice. Key to many of these theoretical accounts is the claim that domestic courts are better equipped than the Court of Justice to compel national governments to comply with EU law. Integrating insights from the comparative judicial politics literature into the context of the EU's preliminary references system, we provide a theoretical and empirical foundation for this claim by arguing that incorporating domestic courts into the EU legal process enhances public support for expansive judicial interpretations of EU law. We go on to argue, however, that this transfer of legitimacy depends on citizens’ views of the national and European courts. We support our argument with evidence from a preregistered survey experiment fielded in Germany.

Type
Research Note
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The IO Foundation

Even with their seemingly ever-expanding role in modern politics, the fundamental question remains of how international courts can successfully compel national governments to abide by their international legal commitments.Footnote 1 Perhaps no international court has navigated this challenge as successfully, and come to wield as much influence and authority, as the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).Footnote 2 From the regulation of trade and economic activity to the enforcement of democratic norms like the rule of law, the CJEU has a profound impact on the development of EU law and the policymaking of European governments.Footnote 3 Beyond the EU, the Court has served as a template for many of the growing number of international and regional courts.Footnote 4

Central to the CJEU's influence as a driver of European integration is the preliminary reference system. Indeed, this procedure, which allows national courts to first refer a case to the CJEU for a ruling on a question of EU law and then make a final decision, is credited with fundamentally transforming the breadth and scope of European law.Footnote 5 By incorporating domestic courts, preliminary references bring the power of domestic courts into the EU legal process. This connection between the CJEU and domestic courts, in turn, enhances the efficacy of EU law and CJEU decisions by raising the political stakes for any member-state government that would consider challenging or otherwise refusing to comply with EU law. As Helfer and Alter note, “governments could not defy the CJEU without also calling into question the independence and authority of their own courts.”Footnote 6

Such empowerment of EU law, however, crucially depends on the ability of domestic courts to overcome the inherent limitation of judicial power: the inability to directly implement decisions.Footnote 7 A domestic court must itself be well positioned to overcome this challenge and compel compliance if it is to be an effective ally for the CJEU. Much like their international counterparts, however, domestic courts cannot presume the efficacy of their decisions but must rely on governments for their implementation.Footnote 8 As a result, even national courts may find themselves constrained if compliance is not forthcoming, an issue which may be particularly likely in precisely those cases for which the CJEU most needs assistance in compelling government behavior. How domestic courts can overcome their own implementation problem, then, is a critical factor in the efficacy of preliminary references as conduits for national courts to promote the successful exercise of the CJEU's judicial authority.

We argue that judicial legitimacy is one pathway by which domestic courts can, through the preliminary reference procedure, enhance the efficacy of CJEU jurisprudence. Combining the institutional context of the CJEU with theoretical insights from the judicial politics literatures on judicial legitimacy and legitimation,Footnote 9 we contend that preliminary references allow domestic courts to “lend” their legitimacy to CJEU decisions, thereby increasing public support for rulings. Using data from an experiment embedded in a survey fielded in Germany, we provide evidence that a domestic court—in our vignette the German Constitutional Court—deciding an issue of EU law based on the CJEU's ruling via a preliminary reference increases public support as compared to the CJEU's directly deciding the case. This legitimizing relationship, however, is limited to citizens who have more trust in their domestic courts than in the CJEU. Taken together, these results provide novel empirical evidence that the actions of domestic courts can directly affect citizens’ acceptance of EU law and contribute to our understanding of why the EU's preliminary reference procedure was so transformational: it increased citizens’ support for EU law.

The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. The next section discusses the preliminary references literature, focusing on the theoretical accounts linking the procedure with the empowerment of EU law. We then present our theory, followed by the research design. After presenting the results, we conclude with a discussion of their potential implications, both for the EU and for international legal regimes more generally.

Preliminary References and the CJEU's Empowerment

The preliminary reference procedure is the cornerstone of the EU legal integration process. Through referrals from national courts, the CJEU established fundamental doctrines such as direct effect (in Van Gend en Loos, allowing national courts to apply EU law themselves) and supremacy (in Costa v. ENEL, establishing EU law's precedence over the conflicting national laws of member states). These doctrines, in tandem, gave individual litigants standing before their national courts to assert their rights under EU law and provided the means for the CJEU to create new protections under the EU treaties. Although whether national governments were willing partners in the expansion of EU law is the subject of an extensive debate,Footnote 10 scholars agree that national courts’ referrals were critical for the CJEU's promotion of legal integration. For example, a popular early explanation for its success was the “judicial empowerment thesis.” As Weiler explains, lower courts across Europe were eager to use the preliminary reference procedure because they were “given the facility to engage with the highest jurisdiction in the Community and thus to have de facto judicial review of legislation.”Footnote 11 Furthermore, the efforts of organized interests to leverage the preliminary reference procedure in national courts pushed EU law forward by providing the CJEU the opportunity to rule on a wide variety of issues.Footnote 12

Additionally, preliminary references not only empowered lower courts but also allowed national courts to empower CJEU decisions—and by extension EU law. In their canonical article on the subject, Burley and Mattli argue that the CJEU “simultaneously strengthens its own legal legitimacy by making it appear that its own authority flows from the national courts. It is the national courts, after all, who have sought its guidance; and it is the national courts who will ultimately decide the case, in the sense of issuing an actual ruling on the facts.”Footnote 13 This mechanism, the “empowerment of the [CJEU] with respect to the national court,” as they term it, critically depends on national courts’ having the ability to compel government compliance with their rulings. Alter, for example, assumes such compliance: “Once national judiciaries had accepted European law supremacy, national courts would not let politicians ignore unwanted [CJEU] decisions … National court support of [CJEU] jurisprudence effectively closed the option of exit through non-compliance with [a CJEU] decision.”Footnote 14 Similarly, Weiler claims, “a state, in our Western democracies, cannot disobey its own courts.”Footnote 15

While such accounts address how the CJEU can obtain compliance from reluctant member-state governments, they largely neglect that domestic courts have the same fundamental compliance challenge.Footnote 16 Much like their international counterparts, domestic courts cannot presume the faithful implementation of their decisions, especially when it is contrary to the preferences of the government tasked with carrying out the decision. Crucially, this fundamental weakness of courts is present for even the most powerful courts in the most consolidated of democracies, including those of the EU.Footnote 17 Thus explanations of the CJEU's success that depend on the efficacy of national courts must explain how domestic courts can further acceptance of EU law in the face of domestic political opposition.

One such explanation is the capacity of domestic courts to use their public support to legitimize, and thereby enhance public acceptance of, international legal decisions. Domestic courts, owing to factors such as socialization,Footnote 18 the use of judicial symbols,Footnote 19 or simply prudent decision making over time,Footnote 20 can develop a “reservoir of goodwill” with citizens.Footnote 21 Even skeptical citizens with little support for the court can come to support its decisions. As Carrubba explains, “If the public observes enough good outcomes, the public will decide that violations of the regulatory regime's rules are not in its interests, and it will punish its government for defying the court … Simply put, if the public knows that compliance is usually in its interests, its government defying a court ruling usually is not in its interests.”Footnote 22 This legitimacy makes noncompliance a politically costly strategy for governments by breeding citizens’ expectations that court decisions are followed and thus fostering compliance even with contentious or unpopular decisions.

Critically, this public support may empower courts to alter public opinion on the policies at issue in their decisions. This “legitimation” of policy, whereby public opinion becomes more favorable toward the position taken by a highly regarded court, makes domestic courts potentially influential opinion makers.Footnote 23 Importantly, scholars have recognized the linkage between citizens’ reactions to international court decisions and the political responses that follow them. Madsen and colleagues, who directly study public attitudes toward European court decisions, write that “the question of whether people are inherently more acceptant of decisions that are made by national rather than international institutions is more broadly relevant to understanding the public backlash against international institutions.”Footnote 24 Such shifts in public support of court rulings have direct consequences for government compliance. Gonzalez-Ocantos and Dinas note that “mass acceptance of rulings provides an important source of leverage because it complicates efforts by political entrepreneurs wishing to engineer backlash against judicial institutions.”Footnote 25 In short, citizens’ reactions to international legal decisions like those rendered by EU courts have direct and important implications for governments’ responses. Specifically, stronger public support for a decision resulting from domestic court involvement encourages compliance by both lowering the cost of compliance, as citizens are more accepting of the result, and raising the cost of noncompliance, as the domestic judiciary's legitimacy contributes to what Weiler refers to as the “enforcement value that national law will have on that occasion.”Footnote 26

Importantly, theory and corroborating empirical evidence exist for this connection between public attitudes, domestic courts’ legitimacy, and compliance. While shifts in the costs of compliance may induce compliance only to the extent that the matter is publicized and politicized, research has shown that courts, civil society, and political actors can give governments “a bloody nose” for not complying by affecting public attitudes.Footnote 27 Moreover, as Vanberg notes, the small electoral margins found in much of democratic politics makes the loss of even a small set of voters potentially damaging. Indeed, Krehbiel provides cross-national empirical evidence that noncompliance decreases government vote share in contexts with a strong norm of compliance, suggesting that such costs can in fact be realized.Footnote 28 Given the difficulty of directly evaluating a government's calculus for compliance,Footnote 29 scholars have provided a wealth of evidence that courts act strategically precisely to induce compliance through public support for their decisions. For example, Vanberg provides evidence that the German Constitutional Court is more likely to confront the government when it expects public awareness of its ruling, while Staton and Krehbiel demonstrate that the Mexican Supreme Court and the German Constitutional Court, respectively, pursue strategies to enhance that awareness.Footnote 30

To further illustrate this linkage, consider the litigation by the United Kingdom's Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) on the issue of gender discrimination. Alter and Vargas argue that the EOC adopted a strategic-litigation strategy to convince domestic courts—specifically, industrial tribunals—to refer cases of gender discrimination in the British workplace to the CJEU after it “could not muster the support necessary to counter the Conservative government's antagonism toward equality policy.”Footnote 31 After it won the Drake v. Chief Adjudication Officer case—brought by a woman denied government benefits designed for men who leave the workforce to care for a disabled person—at the CJEU and the domestic court applied the CJEU's ruling, the EOC “launched a large media campaign with grassroots meetings and conferences” that made it “politically too embarrassing for the supposedly family-oriented Conservative government to deprive [female] caretakers and the disabled from benefits.”Footnote 32 By “exciting public attention with the successful expansion of the legal protections available to women workers and creating the potential of large costs for employers who discriminated on the basis of gender,” the EOC elicited policy change.Footnote 33 Specifically, it was the decision making of domestic courts—by referring cases and following CJEU rulings—that enabled the EOC to galvanize public support for policy change “when its other efforts at influencing the national political agenda failed.”Footnote 34

This union of the judicial legitimacy and legitimation scholarship, therefore, suggests that domestic courts should—through the preliminary reference procedure—have a unique capacity to affect public support for EU law. By incorporating national courts into the EU legal process, preliminary references allow the CJEU to effectively tap into national courts’ legitimacy and, thereby, both increase support for a policy position and raise the cost of noncompliance with the now-combined CJEU and national court decision. This dynamic is particularly advantageous for the CJEU, because it tends to have less legitimacy than its national counterparts.Footnote 35 While data on attitudes toward the CJEU are limited, the most recent Eurobarometer that asked about trust in both national legal systems and the CJEU found slightly higher trust in the former (53 percent versus 48 percent).Footnote 36 Simply put, the CJEU alone may not have sufficient public support, but it can rely on a national court that does.Footnote 37 If preliminary references have such a legitimizing effect, then we may hypothesize that citizens are more supportive of decisions on EU law made by their domestic court via the preliminary reference process than decisions made directly by the CJEU without the national court's involvement:

H1 Public support is higher for preliminary reference rulings issued by a national court than for rulings issued directly by the CJEU.

While largely at a disadvantage compared to their domestic counterparts, international courts like the CJEU may similarly develop a basis of public support.Footnote 38 This diffuse support functions much like that of domestic courts, in that it facilitates public acceptance of decisions, including those with which citizens disagree. If domestic courts legitimize EU legal decisions through the preliminary reference process, the degree of their impact likely depends on whether citizens are already willing to support a CJEU ruling or need to be convinced by their domestic courts to do so. Those who view the CJEU positively are already likely to support the Court's decisions, irrespective of national court involvement, thus limiting the impact of a preliminary reference. The legitimizing impact of a preliminary reference is likely greatest among those who hold their domestic courts in high regard but do not feel the same about the CJEU. For these individuals, their misgivings about a decision to expand EU law might be assuaged by the participation of a domestic court they trust.

H2 The effect of the preliminary reference procedure on public support for a decision increases as trust in the national court surpasses trust in the CJEU.

Experimental Evidence from Germany

The data we use to test these hypotheses come from an experiment embedded in a nationally representative survey of 1,205 Germans fielded from 3 to 20 September 2021 in partnership with YouGov.Footnote 39 Germany is an appropriate context for testing our hypotheses for several reasons. First, support for the EU and EU institutions, including the CJEU, tends to be strong in Germany, particularly in comparison to other Western European countries.Footnote 40 This higher baseline of support should make it harder to find evidence of a legitimizing effect from a preliminary reference, as respondents may be predisposed to support EU law irrespective of the court interpreting it. Second, public trust in the German judiciary is similarly high, making our theoretical mechanism of judicial legitimation of policy more plausible than it would be in a context with a highly politicized and maligned judiciary, such as Hungary.Footnote 41 Such a context raises important theoretical questions that we consider in the conclusion. Third, Germany is the largest member state of the EU and particularly influential when it comes to the scope and depth of EU integration,Footnote 42 making it a substantively important case for understanding the dynamics of public support for EU law.

Our experimental approach is centered on a vignette in which respondents are told about a hypothetical court decision that used EU law to respond to a hypothetical government policy.Footnote 43 Each respondent first read the following:

Imagine the federal government passed a law restricting the ability of unvaccinated citizens of other EU countries to enter Germany. The federal government contends that the policy is important to avoid a spike in coronavirus cases.

Respondents then were randomly assigned to one of two treatments designed to reflect either the direct involvement of the CJEU or the preliminary reference procedure, by which the CJEU's ruling is carried out through the decision of Germany's constitutional court, the Bundesverfassungsgericht. The former treatment read:

In response, the European Court of Justice ruled that the federal government's policy violates EU law guaranteeing the freedom of movement. As a result of the European Court of Justice's decision, the federal government must allow both vaccinated and unvaccinated EU citizens to enter the country.

The latter read:

In response, the Bundesverfassungsgericht asked the European Court of Justice whether the policy violates EU law. Based on the European Court of Justice's opinion, the Bundesverfassungsgericht ruled that the federal government's policy violates EU law guaranteeing the freedom of movement. As a result of the Bundesverfassungsgericht's decision, the federal government must allow both vaccinated and unvaccinated EU citizens to enter the country.

Four aspects of the vignette merit a more detailed discussion. First, we designed the vignette to be realistic by intentionally selecting a policy that was both salient and relevant for EU law. At the time of our survey, COVID-19 vaccines were widely available but still generating political controversy, particularly when it came to vaccine mandates and travel restrictions.Footnote 44 Moreover, such restrictions are directly relevant for EU law, particularly the freedom of movement, making it conceivable that such a policy would be challenged as in violation of EU law.

Second, our choice of the German Constitutional Court as the referring court, while a challenge to the realism of our vignette due to the Court's well-known reluctance to refer cases to the CJEU,Footnote 45 presents a “best case” scenario for demonstrating the plausibility of our hypothesized legitimizing effect of preliminary references due to the Court's uniquely high public support and familiarity.Footnote 46 In short, if any domestic court is likely to legitimize EU law, it is the German Constitutional Court. That said, even with recent research finding that apex courts are increasingly engaging in the preliminary reference process,Footnote 47 we acknowledge this limitation of our vignette's generalizability.Footnote 48

Third, we note that the legal decision is the same regardless of which court issues it. Respondents face the same policy outcome regardless of treatment; the only aspect that differs is the involvement of the national court in the preliminary references treatment.

Fourth, the preliminary references treatment is designed to reflect the nature of that procedure by explicitly informing respondents that the national court requested the CJEU's ruling and based its decision on that ruling. In doing so, the vignette makes clear the roles of both the national court and the CJEU. We label the treatment variable PreliminaryReferenceDecision, with a value of 1 for those respondents who read about the Bundesverfassungsgericht deciding in concert with the CJEU's ruling and 0 for respondents who read about the CJEU issuing the decision directly.

Immediately following the vignette, respondents were asked to answer three questions (each on a four-point scale) about their reaction to the court decision—questions that reflect our theoretical argument's emphasis on the linkage between public attitudes toward judicial decisions and government compliance. First, we asked respondents whether they agreed or disagreed with the decision. Second, we asked whether they accepted the decision as the final word on the matter or believed it should be challenged.Footnote 49 The third question was: “Imagine the federal Government refused to comply with the [ECJ's / Federal Constitutional Court's] decision and continued restricting the ability of unvaccinated citizens of other EU countries to enter Germany. Would you support this effort?” Overall, these three items form a reliable scale, with α = 0.70. The items all load on a single dimension, with three loading on this first factor at 0.73, 0.64, and 0.52, respectively. We use as our outcome variable the scores from this factor analysis, scaled from 0 to 1.Footnote 50 Higher values of the outcome variable, which we label SupportForEULawDecision, indicate a more positive attitude toward the decision. We expect more such support for decisions issued by the Bundesverfassungsgericht through the preliminary reference procedure (PreliminaryReferenceDecision = 1).

For our second hypothesis, we compare respondents’ confidence in the CJEU with their confidence in the German Constitutional Court. For both courts, respondents were asked whether they have “a great deal of confidence,” “only some confidence,” or “hardly any confidence.”Footnote 51 Since our theoretical expectation is that the effect of a preliminary reference will occur among respondents who trust the domestic court—here the Bundesverfassungsgericht—more than the CJEU, we create a dichotomous variable (HigherConfidenceInBundesverfassungsgericht) that takes a value of 1 if the respondent has more confidence in the Bundesverfassungsgericht than in the CJEU, and 0 otherwise. Our expectation is that the effect of PreliminaryReferenceDecision will be greater among those with more confidence in the German court than in the CJEU.Footnote 52

Results

We analyze the results of our experiment using ordinary least squares. SupportForEULawDecision is the outcome variable and PreliminaryReferenceDecision the key explanatory variable, which we interact with HigherConfidenceInBundesverfassungsgericht to analyze the second hypothesis. The left pane of Figure 1 presents the direct treatment effects.Footnote 53 As predicted by our first hypothesis, a decision rendered by the Bundesverfassungsgericht, with the aid of a CJEU opinion, engenders significantly higher public support than the same decision issued directly by the CJEU. The difference is substantial: nearly one-fifth of a standard deviation.

FIGURE 1. Preliminary references and support for European Union law

The impact of a preliminary reference is even clearer when analyzing the conditional effect of respondents’ relative trust in the German court versus the CJEU. These results are presented in the right pane of the figure. Consistent with our second hypothesis, a reference increases support for the decision only among those who have more confidence in the German Constitutional Court than in the CJEU. These respondents’ support increased significantly, from 0.39 for a CJEU decision to 0.51 for a preliminary reference decision issued by the Constitutional Court; the difference is close to half of a standard deviation. In short, a preliminary reference helped win the support of those most skeptical of the CJEU.

We also note two other observations from these results. First, lack of confidence in the CJEU corresponds, unsurprisingly, to less support for a decision when it is made directly by the CJEU. Importantly, this relationship appears specific to the CJEU and not reflective of a broader distrust of courts, as respondents who distrust the CJEU did not exhibit significantly less support for a decision by the Bundesverfassungsgericht via a preliminary reference. Second, a preliminary reference had no statistical effect on support for the decision among those who trust the CJEU at least as much as the German Constitutional Court. In other words, referring a case appears to neither harm nor help the CJEU's standing among this subset of the population.

Discussion

Few aspects of the EU's legal system garner as much attention as the preliminary reference system. While this work largely focuses on the role of judges and political elites,Footnote 54 our account's incorporation of the public into the EU legal system's success reflects a growing recognition that citizens’ willingness to support and accept the EU's growing role will be necessary for the bloc's continued vitality.Footnote 55 Arguing that references enhance the efficacy of CJEU jurisprudence by allowing domestic courts to lend their legitimacy to the process, we provide a theoretical foundation for the procedure's impact that accounts for the political realities of both the CJEU and national courts. This advance, coupled with evidence from a survey experiment fielded in Germany, broadens our conceptualization of how preliminary references have influenced, and continue to influence, the successful expansion and development of EU law.

These findings have several implications. While comparative courts scholars have long recognized the role of public opinion in shaping judicial politics,Footnote 56 it is only more recently that they have begun to consider the pathways by which public support for international law and the decisions of international courts develops.Footnote 57 Our results suggest that, contrary to other recent research,Footnote 58 process can matter in determining how citizens react to a ruling on international law. Even if citizens generally care more about outcomes than about specific judicial procedures, they may be responsive to processes that integrate institutions with which they are more comfortable and familiar, such as domestic courts. This dynamic suggests that the best tactic available to international courts may not be legal doctrines or precedents,Footnote 59 but procedures that allow them to recruit allies from the domestic judiciary. With the EU serving as a model for many international legal systems,Footnote 60 other preliminary reference systems have the potential to provide a similar benefit to other international courts.

Second, our argument and results contribute to the evolving literature on preliminary references in the EU.Footnote 61 By bringing the procedure's impact on public opinion into the literature, we highlight the continued relevance of references for an EU—and CJEU—facing numerous political, economic, and social challenges.Footnote 62 As the EU's legal system has matured, so too has the preliminary reference system. For example, apex courts appear to be considerably more willing to engage with the CJEU through preliminary references than they were earlier in the EU's development.Footnote 63 To the extent that high courts enjoy greater public support than their counterparts lower in the judicial hierarchy, our argument suggests that this development could promote even greater public acceptance of an expanding EU legal order. However, our argument and empirical evidence do not represent the end of potential theoretical development on this topic. For instance, preliminary references’ legitimacy-conferring effect may depend on citizens’ awareness of decisions,Footnote 64 an issue scholars have recognized in the context of both international and domestic courts.Footnote 65 Thus courts’ and other legal actors’ communication strategies,Footnote 66 and citizens’ sources of information, may condition references’ ultimate efficacy. While we find that references can allow the CJEU to borrow national courts’ legitimacy, further research might adjudicate the precise conditions under which they do so.

Third, by focusing on judicial legitimacy, our argument raises the question of what, if any, impact preliminary references have when domestic courts lack public support. Where the domestic courts are just as distrusted as their international counterparts, references may have little capacity to grow public support. If, however, citizens hold an international court in higher regard than their national judiciary, then involving a domestic court in the legal process might weaken public support for international law by tainting the process. With the politicization of courts part of the global trend of democratic backsliding,Footnote 67 including in the EU,Footnote 68 such a dynamic could significantly undermine the capacity of international courts to enforce international law and uphold democratic norms.Footnote 69 The potential for such a relationship highlights the need for further research on the use and consequences of preliminary references in contexts like less consolidated and backsliding democracies.

Fourth, while we apply the study's theoretical framework to the EU, its focus on judicial legitimacy suggests an applicability to a broader set of institutional contexts. With similar, if not identical, preliminary reference procedures available to many international courts and tribunals,Footnote 70 a similar dynamic may come into play in systems beyond the EU. For example, Alter and Helfer note that the Andean Tribunal of Justice has a procedure that effectively mirrors the CJEU's preliminary reference.Footnote 71 Our theory would predict that this could enhance support for Andean law, to the extent that member states have highly esteemed domestic judiciaries. More generally, with most of the non-European international courts that have preliminary reference procedures located in Africa and the Americas, a dynamic such as what we find here may often be more aspirational than currently observable, as support for many of those regions’ domestic courts is becoming increasingly conditional on partisan preferences.Footnote 72 Nonetheless, to the extent that domestic courts have gained diffuse support in comparison to their international counterparts, our findings suggest that references should allow international legal systems to leverage that domestic judicial legitimacy. With this in mind, we hope that future research will expand beyond the EU to evaluate the extent to which theories related to preliminary references, including our own, are robust to the different political, economic, and social contexts in which other international courts operate.

We close by noting three important limitations of our study. First, our results come from a single country. While Germany's importance in EU politics, and its unique political culture, make it an appropriate case for our study, it is still only one of twenty-seven member states.

Second, our results are based on a vignette describing a single policy area, so we must be cautious in extrapolating the findings to other policy areas. On the other hand, we find strikingly similar results in an alternative experiment (presented in the appendix) that focuses on a core area of EU law, taxes. These additional experimental results give us some confidence that our findings are not merely a function of the specific policy presented in the vignette.

Third, the external validity of our findings is necessarily affected by the nature of our experimental design. By construction, the vignette informs all respondents of the EU law decision. As we mentioned earlier, public awareness of CJEU decisions and EU law is often modest, which places something of a scope condition on our argument. In this sense, our results might be described as representing a “best-case scenario” for the legitimacy-enhancing effect of preliminary references. But we do not see this as undermining the significance of our finding. Even the potential for such an effect can influence the behavior of governments concerned about political blowback. Moreover, awareness of cases is itself a function of strategic behavior on the part of political elites,Footnote 73 interest groups or other entities with a stake in a case,Footnote 74 and the media,Footnote 75 all of whom may have, under the right circumstances, the incentive to activate the legitimacy-borrowing property of references that we identify here. While these are theoretical and empirical extensions we are unable to grapple with here, we see our central findings as potential stepping stones toward understanding the impact of institutional features on citizens’ support for international law.

Data Availability Statement

Replication files for this research note may be found at <https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/5V9F4K>.

Supplementary Material

Supplementary material for this research note is available at <https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818323000243>.

Acknowledgments

The surveys were reviewed and cleared by the WVU Institutional Review Board. The experiment was preregistered with the As Predicted service of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Credibility Lab. A copy of the plan is available in the online appendix. The authors thank Michael Nelson and Amanda Driscoll for agreeing to the use of the data for this paper and to participants at the SPSA, MPSA, University of Washington's Western United States Graduate Seminar on the European Union, the Emory judicial politics group, Texas Comparative Circle, and Texas Triangle International Relations conferences for their helpful feedback. The authors also recognize the generous support of the Jim and Gail Woolwine Political Science Faculty Travel Fund at WVU.

Funding

This material is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants SES-2027653, SES-2027671, and SES-2027664. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

Footnotes

2. The CJEU consists of both the Court of Justice and the General Court. All references to the CJEU in this paper are to the Court of Justice unless otherwise stated.

4. Alter and Helfer Reference Alter and Helfer2010.

6. Helfer and Alter Reference Helfer and Alter2013, 491.

9. Gibson, Caldeira, and Baird Reference Gibson, Caldeira and Baird1998; Ura Reference Ura2014.

10. Garrett, Kelemen, and Schulz Reference Garrett, Daniel Kelemen and Schulz1998; Mattli and Slaughter Reference Mattli and Slaughter1998.

11. Weiler Reference Weiler1991, 2426.

12. Carrubba and Murrah Reference Carrubba and Murrah2005; Pavone Reference Pavone2022; Stone Sweet and Brunell Reference Stone Sweet and Brunell1998.

13. Burley and Mattli Reference Burley and Mattli1993, 64.

14. Alter Reference Alter2001, 190.

15. Weiler Reference Weiler1991, 2421.

19. Gibson and Caldeira Reference Gibson and Caldeira2009.

20. Staton and Vanberg Reference Staton and Vanberg2008.

21. Gibson, Caldeira, and Baird Reference Gibson, Caldeira and Baird1998, 343.

22. Carrubba Reference Carrubba2009, 66.

25. Gonzalez-Ocantos and Dinas Reference Gonzalez-Ocantos and Dinas2019, 890.

26. Weiler Reference Weiler1994, 519.

27. Krehbiel Reference Krehbiel2016; Staton Reference Staton2010. Vanberg quotes a member of the German Bundestag as saying, “There is not a single deputy here who thinks it would be advisable to move against the court. A serious confrontation would just create a public discussion in which one could easily get a bloody nose” (Reference Vanberg2005, 121).

29. Tallberg argues that “the effectiveness of [the preliminary references] system in inducing state compliance is exceedingly difficult to measure in quantitative terms,” as these data “fail to capture much of the compliance-inducing activity of national courts” (Reference Tallberg2002, 621).

31. Alter and Vargas Reference Alter and Vargas2000, 454.

32. Footnote Ibid., 464.

33. Footnote Ibid., 455.

34. Footnote Ibid., 458.

35. Caldeira and Gibson Reference Caldeira and Gibson1995; Gibson and Caldeira Reference Gibson and Caldeira1995.

36. Eurobarometer 2018. Notably, trust in domestic legal institutions was higher in fourteen of twenty-eight EU countries; of the thirteen with more trust in the CJEU than in domestic courts (in one country the two were trusted at equal levels), only three—Belgium, Spain, and Portugal—were not countries admitted to the EU in 2004 or later, many of which are younger democracies with judiciaries still establishing their own public support. We consider the implications of our theory for such cases in the conclusion.

37. Our account stands in contrast to those that are skeptical of such a dynamic when it comes to understanding how the CJEU can increase support for EU law among national constituencies. For example, Mattli and Slaughter Reference Mattli and Slaughter1998, 199 argue that domestic courts “would be constrained by … majority political preferences,” making them poorly suited to alter citizens’ opposition to EU law. They go so far as to ask, “If [domestic] judges are constrained by majority political preferences … how then is the construction of the European legal system even a puzzle?” Explicit in such arguments is that preferences for EU law are exogenous to the decision making of national judiciaries, as courts are not “deciding whether to support further European integration (a decision ultimately up to the electorate).”

39. See the appendix for technical details of the survey.

40. In the 2018 European Social Survey, Germany had the fourth-highest proportion of respondents (58%) preferring that EU integration go further, behind only Lithuania (60%), Spain (59%), and Poland (59%). The average was 45% across twenty-four member states for which data were available. Similarly, in the Autumn 2019 Eurobarometer Germans had the fifth-highest level of trust in the CJEU, after Denmark, Netherlands, Finland, and Sweden. See the appendix for details.

42. Schneider and Slantchev Reference Schneider and Slantchev2018.

43. The experiment is preregistered with the As Predicted service of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton Credibility Lab and can be found in the appendix.

46. Gibson, Caldeira, and Baird Reference Gibson, Caldeira and Baird1998.

47. Pavone and Kelemen Reference Pavone and Kelemen2019.

48. In the appendix we present the results of a second experiment that uses different German courts (the Federal Court of Justice, or Bundesgerichtshof, and a local tax court) and a different policy (the taxation of foreign pensions) to at least partially address this generalizability concern.

49. The exact wording is borrowed from Gibson and Caldeira Reference Gibson and Caldeira2003: “Do you accept the court's decision? That is, do you think the decision should be accepted and taken as the final say on the matter?”

50. In the appendix we provide analyses using each component question separately.

51. We acknowledge that confidence questions are a flawed measure of diffuse support (Gibson, Caldeira, and Spence Reference Gibson, Caldeira and Spence2003). In the appendix we conduct several robustness analyses using alternative measures, such as a continuous confidence differential and alternative questions asking respondents to directly compare the CJEU and the German Court.

52. As one's attitudes toward legal institutions are not randomly assigned, in the appendix we report analyses including a series of control variables that capture respondents’ political and demographic characteristics, as well as a measure of pretreatment support for barring unvaccinated individuals from entering Germany.

53. See the appendix for a table with full regression results.

57. Carrubba and Gabel Reference Carrubba and Gabel2015; Chilton and Linos Reference Chilton and Linos2021.

60. Alter and Helfer Reference Alter and Helfer2010.

61. Krehbiel and Cheruvu Reference Krehbiel and Cheruvu2022.

63. Pavone and Kelemen Reference Pavone and Kelemen2019.

67. Ginsburg and Huq Reference Ginsburg and Huq2018; Staton, Reenock, and Holsinger Reference Staton, Reenock and Holsinger2022.

69. Gartzke and Naoi Reference Gartzke and Naoi2011; Keohane, Macedo, and Moravcsik Reference Keohane, Macedo and Moravcsik2009.

70. Krehbiel and Cheruvu Reference Krehbiel and Cheruvu2022.

71. Alter and Helfer Reference Alter and Helfer2010.

72. Bartels, Horowitz, and Kramon Reference Bartels, Horowitz and Kramon2023; Bartels and Kramon Reference Bartels and Kramon2020.

73. Gauri, Staton, and Cullell Reference Gauri, Staton and Cullell2015.

References

Alter, Karen J. 2000. The European Union's Legal System and Domestic Policy: Spillover or Backlash? International Organization 54 (3):489518.10.1162/002081800551307CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alter, Karen J. 2001. Establishing the Supremacy of European Law: The Making of an International Rule of Law in Europe. Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Alter, Karen J., and Helfer, Laurence R.. 2010. Nature or Nurture? Judicial Lawmaking in the European Court of Justice and the Andean Tribunal of Justice. International Organization 64 (4):563–92.10.1017/S0020818310000238CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alter, Karen J., and Vargas, Jeannette. 2000. Explaining Variation in the Use of European Litigation Strategies: European Community Law and British Gender Equality Policy. Comparative Political Studies 33 (4):452–82.10.1177/0010414000033004002CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aydin-Cakir, Aylin. 2023. The Varying Effect of Court-Curbing: Evidence from Hungary and Poland. Journal of European Public Policy, 127.Google Scholar
Bartels, Brandon L, and Kramon, Eric. 2020. Does Public Support for Judicial Power Depend on Who Is in Political Power? Testing a Theory of Partisan Alignment in Africa. American Political Science Review 114 (1):144–63.10.1017/S0003055419000704CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bartels, Brandon L., Horowitz, Jeremy, and Kramon, Eric. 2023. Can Democratic Principles Protect High Courts from Partisan Backlash? Public Reactions to the Kenyan Supreme Court's Role in the 2017 Election Crisis. American Journal of Political Science 67 (3):790807.10.1111/ajps.12666CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blauberger, Michael, and Kelemen, R. Daniel. 2017. Can Courts Rescue National Democracy? Judicial Safeguards Against Democratic Backsliding in the EU. Journal of European Public Policy 24 (3):321–36.10.1080/13501763.2016.1229357CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burley, Anne-Marie, and Mattli, Walter. 1993. Europe Before the Court: A Political Theory of Legal Integration. International Organization 47 (1):4176.10.1017/S0020818300004707CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caldeira, Gregory A., and Gibson, James L.. 1995. The Legitimacy of the Court of Justice in the European Union: Models of Institutional Support. American Political Science Review 89 (2):356–76.10.2307/2082430CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrubba, Clifford J. 2001. The Electoral Connection in European Union Politics. Journal of Politics 63 (1):141–58.10.1111/0022-3816.00062CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrubba, Clifford J. 2009. A Model of the Endogenous Development of Judicial Institutions in Federal and International Systems. Journal of Politics 71 (1):5569.10.1017/S002238160809004XCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrubba, Clifford J., and Gabel, Matthew. 2015. International Courts and the Performance of International Agreements: A General Theory with Evidence from the European Union. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Carrubba, Clifford J., and Gabel, Matthew. 2017. International Courts: A Theoretical Assessment. Annual Review of Political Science 20:5573.10.1146/annurev-polisci-051215-022917CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrubba, Clifford J., and Murrah, Lacey. 2005. Legal Integration and Use of the Preliminary Ruling Process in the European Union. International Organization 59 (2):399418.10.1017/S0020818305050137CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheruvu, Sivaram. 2023. Education, Public Support for Institutions, and the Separation of Powers. Political Science Research and Methods 11 (3):570–87.10.1017/psrm.2022.29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chilton, Adam, and Linos, Katerina. 2021. Preferences and Compliance with International Law. Theoretical Inquiries in Law 22 (2):247–98.10.1515/til-2021-0023CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christenson, Dino P., and Glick, David M.. 2015. Issue-Specific Opinion Change: The Supreme Court and Health Care Reform. Public Opinion Quarterly 79 (4):881905.10.1093/poq/nfv040CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, Tom S. 2011. The Limits of Judicial Independence. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Conant, Lisa. 2002. Justice Contained: Law and Politics in the European Union. Cornell University Press.10.7591/9781501722646CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dahl, Robert A. 1957. Decision-Making in a Democracy: The Supreme Court As a National Policy-Maker. Journal of Public Law 6:279.Google Scholar
Dederke, Julian. 2022. CJEU Judgments in the News: Capturing the Public Salience of Decisions of the EU's Highest Court. Journal of European Public Policy 29 (4):609–28.10.1080/13501763.2021.1872682CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engst, Benjamin G. 2021. The Two Faces of Judicial Power: Dynamics of Judicial-Political Bargaining. Palgrave Macmillan.10.1007/978-3-030-46016-7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Epp, Charles R. 1998. The Rights Revolution: Lawyers, Activists, and Supreme Courts in Comparative Perspective. University of Chicago Press.10.7208/chicago/9780226772424.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Epperly, Brad. 2019. The Political Foundations of Judicial Independence in Dictatorship and Democracy. Oxford University Press.10.1093/oso/9780198845027.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eurobarometer. 2018. Standard Eurobarometer 90: Autumn 2018. Available at <https://europa.eu/eurobarometer/surveys/detail/2215>..>Google Scholar
Eurobarometer. 2019. Standard Eurobarometer 92: Autumn. Available at <https://europa.eu/eurobarometer/surveys/detail/2255>..>Google Scholar
Survey, European Social. 2018. ESS Round 9, 2018. Timing of Life, Justice and Fairness. Available at <https://ess-search.nsd.no/en/study/bdc7c350-1029-4cb3-9d5e-53f668b8fa74>..>Google Scholar
Gabel, Matthew. 1998. Public Support for European Integration: An Empirical Test of Five Theories. Journal of Politics 60 (2):333–54.10.2307/2647912CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gabel, Matthew J., Carrubba, Clifford J., Ainsley, Caitlin, and Beaudette, Donald M.. 2012. Of Courts and Commerce. Journal of Politics 74 (4):1125–37.10.1017/S0022381612000679CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garrett, Geoffrey, Daniel Kelemen, R., and Schulz, Heiner. 1998. The European Court of Justice, National Governments, and Legal Integration in the European Union. International Organization 52 (1):149–76.10.1162/002081898550581CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gartzke, Erik, and Naoi, Megumi. 2011. Multilateralism and Democracy: A Dissent Regarding Keohane, Macedo, and Moravcsik. International Organization 65 (3):589–98.10.1017/S0020818311000142CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gauri, Varun, Staton, Jeffrey K., and Cullell, Jorge Vargas. 2015. The Costa Rican Supreme Court's Compliance Monitoring System. Journal of Politics 77 (3):774–86.10.1086/681260CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, James L., and Caldeira, Gregory A.. 1995. The Legitimacy of Transnational Legal Institutions: Compliance, Support, and the European Court of Justice. American Journal of Political Science 39 (2):459–89.10.2307/2111621CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, James L., and Caldeira, Gregory A.. 2003. Defenders of Democracy? Legitimacy, Popular Acceptance, and the South African Constitutional Court. Journal of Politics 65 (1):130.10.1111/1468-2508.t01-1-00001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, James L., and Caldeira, Gregory A.. 2009. Citizens, Courts, and Confirmations: Positivity Theory and the Judgments of the American People. Princeton University Press.10.1515/9781400830602CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, James L., Caldeira, Gregory A., and Baird, Vanessa A.. 1998. On the Legitimacy of National High Courts. American Political Science Review 92 (2):343–58.10.2307/2585668CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, James L., Caldeira, Gregory A., and Spence, Lester Kenyatta. 2003. Measuring Attitudes Toward the United States Supreme Court. American Journal of Political Science 47 (2):354–67.10.1111/1540-5907.00025CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginsburg, Tom, and Huq, Aziz Z.. 2018. How to Save a Constitutional Democracy. University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Gonzalez-Ocantos, Ezequiel, and Dinas, Elias. 2019. Compensation and Compliance: Sources of Public Acceptance of the UK Supreme Court's Brexit Decision. Law and Society Review 53 (3):889919.10.1111/lasr.12421CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helfer, Laurence R., and Alter, Karen J.. 2013. Legitimacy and Lawmaking: A Tale of Three International Courts. Theoretical Inquiries in Law 14 (2):479504.10.1515/til-2013-024CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobolt, Sara B. 2016. The Brexit Vote: A Divided Nation, A Divided Continent. Journal of European Public Policy 23 (9):1259–77.10.1080/13501763.2016.1225785CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hobolt, Sara B., and de Vries, Catherine E.. 2016. Public Support for European Integration. Annual Review of Political Science 19:413–32.10.1146/annurev-polisci-042214-044157CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoekstra, Valerie J. 2000. The Supreme Court and Local Public Opinion. American Political Science Review 94 (1):89100.10.2307/2586382CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keohane, Robert O., Macedo, Stephen, and Moravcsik, Andrew. 2009. Democracy-Enhancing Multilateralism. International Organization 63 (1):131.10.1017/S0020818309090018CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N. 2016. The Politics of Judicial Procedures: The Role of Public Oral Hearings in the German Constitutional Court. American Journal of Political Science 60 (4):9901005.10.1111/ajps.12229CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N. 2019. Elections, Public Awareness, and the Efficacy of Constitutional Review. Journal of Law and Courts 7 (1):5379.10.1086/699241CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N. 2021a. Do Voters Punish Noncompliance with High Courts? A Cross-National Analysis. Politics 41 (2):156–72.10.1177/0263395720935368CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N. 2021b. Public Awareness and the Behavior of Unpopular Courts. British Journal of Political Science 51 (4):1601–19.10.1017/S0007123419000723CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N., and Cheruvu, Sivaram. 2021. The COVID-19 Pandemic and Public Support for European Integration: Evidence from Germany. Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy 2 (1):6380.10.1561/113.00000030CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krehbiel, Jay N., and Cheruvu, Sivaram. 2022. Can International Courts Enhance Domestic Judicial Review? Separation of Powers and the European Court of Justice. Journal of Politics 84 (1):258–75.10.1086/715250CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsson, Olof, Naurin, Daniel, Derlén, Mattias, and Lindholm, Johan. 2017. Speaking Law to Power: The Strategic Use of Precedent of the Court of Justice of the European Union. Comparative Political Studies 50 (7):879907.10.1177/0010414016639709CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lohse, Eva Julia. 2015. The German Constitutional Court and Preliminary References: Still a Match Not Made in Heaven? German Law Journal 16 (6):1491–508.10.1017/S2071832200021234CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Madsen, Mikael Rask, Mayoral, Juan A., Strezhnev, Anton, and Voeten, Erik. 2022. Sovereignty, Substance, and Public Support for European Courts’ Human Rights Rulings. American Political Science Review 116 (2):419–38.10.1017/S0003055421001143CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mattli, Walter, and Slaughter, Anne-Marie. 1998. Revisiting the European Court of Justice. International Organization 52 (1):177209.10.1162/002081898550590CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meyer, Philipp. 2021. Promoted Media Coverage of Court Decisions: Media Gatekeeping of Court Press Releases and the Role of News Values. Journalism Studies 22 (6):723–40.10.1080/1461670X.2020.1819861CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pavone, Tommaso. 2022. The Ghostwriters: Lawyers and the Politics Behind the Judicial Construction of Europe. Cambridge University Press.10.1017/9781009076326CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pavone, Tommaso, and Kelemen, R. Daniel. 2019. The Evolving Judicial Politics of European Integration: The European Court of Justice and National Courts Revisited. European Law Journal 25 (4):352–73.10.1111/eulj.12321CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pech, Laurent, Wachowiec, Patryk, and Mazur, Dariusz. 2021. Poland's Rule of Law Breakdown: A Five-Year Assessment of EU's (In)Action. Hague Journal on the Rule of Law 13:143.10.1007/s40803-021-00151-9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, Gerald N. 1991. The Hollow Hope: Can Courts Bring About Social Change? University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Rovny, Jan, Bakker, Ryan, Hooghe, Liesbet, Jolly, Seth, Marks, Gary, Polk, Jonathan, Steenbergen, Marco, and Vachudova, Milada Anna. 2022. Contesting Covid: The Ideological Bases of Partisan Responses to the Covid-19 Pandemic. European Journal of Political Research 61 (4):1155–64.10.1111/1475-6765.12510CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schneider, Christina J., and Slantchev, Branislav L.. 2018. The Domestic Politics of International Cooperation: Germany and the European Debt Crisis. International Organization 72 (1):131.10.1017/S0020818317000406CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schroeder, Philipp. 2022. Pushing Boundaries: How Lawmakers Shape Judicial Decision-Making. Comparative Political Studies 55 (14):2447–79.10.1177/00104140221089649CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K. 2006. Constitutional Review and the Selective Promotion of Case Results. American Journal of Political Science 50 (1):98112.10.1111/j.1540-5907.2006.00172.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K. 2010. Judicial Power and Strategic Communication in Mexico. Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511750632CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K., and Moore, Will H.. 2011. Judicial Power in Domestic and International Politics. International Organization 65 (3):553–87.10.1017/S0020818311000130CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K., Reenock, Christopher, and Holsinger, Jordan. 2022. Can Courts Be Bulwarks of Democracy? Judges and the Politics of Prudence. Cambridge University Press.10.1017/9781009030939CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K., and Romero, Alexia. 2019. Rational Remedies: The Role of Opinion Clarity in the Inter-American Human Rights System. International Studies Quarterly 63 (3):477–91.10.1093/isq/sqz031CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staton, Jeffrey K., and Vanberg, Georg. 2008. The Value of Vagueness: Delegation, Defiance, and Judicial Opinions. American Journal of Political Science 52 (3):504–19.10.1111/j.1540-5907.2008.00326.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sternberg, Sebastian, Brouard, Sylvain, and Hönnige, Christoph. 2022. The Legitimacy-Conferring Capacity of Constitutional Courts: Evidence from a Comparative Survey Experiment. European Journal of Political Research 61 (4):973–96.10.1111/1475-6765.12480CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stiansen, Øyvind. 2021. Directing Compliance? Remedial Approach and Compliance with European Court of Human Rights Judgments. British Journal of Political Science 51 (2):899907.10.1017/S0007123419000292CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stone Sweet, Alec, and Brunell, Thomas L.. 1998. Constructing a Supranational Constitution: Dispute Resolution and Governance in the European Community. American Political Science Review 92 (1):6381.10.2307/2585929CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tallberg, Jonas. 2002. Paths to Compliance: Enforcement, Management, and the European Union. International Organization 56 (3):609–43.10.1162/002081802760199908CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ura, Joseph Daniel. 2014. Backlash and Legitimation: Macro Political Responses to Supreme Court Decisions. American Journal of Political Science 58 (1):110–26.10.1111/ajps.12048CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vanberg, Georg. 2001. Legislative-Judicial Relations: A Game-Theoretic Approach to Constitutional Review. American Journal of Political Science 45 (2):346–61.10.2307/2669345CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vanberg, Georg. 2005. The Politics of Constitutional Review in Germany. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Vanberg, Georg. 2015. Constitutional Courts in Comparative Perspective: A Theoretical Assessment. Annual Review of Political Science 18:167–85.10.1146/annurev-polisci-040113-161150CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voeten, Erik. 2013. Public Opinion and the Legitimacy of International Courts. Theoretical Inquiries in Law 14 (2):411–36.10.1515/til-2013-021CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiler, J.H.H. 1991. The Transformation of Europe. Yale Law Journal 100 (8):2403–83.10.2307/796898CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiler, J.H.H. 1994. A Quiet Revolution: The European Court of Justice and Its Interlocutors. Comparative Political Studies 26 (4):510–34.10.1177/0010414094026004006CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

FIGURE 1. Preliminary references and support for European Union law

Supplementary material: File

Cheruvu and Krehbiel supplementary material

Cheruvu and Krehbiel supplementary material
Download Cheruvu and Krehbiel supplementary material(File)
File 1.2 MB