Sapiro-Gheiler, Eitan, and Jonathan P. Kastellec. (2026) 2026. “Appealing to Large-Language-Model-As-Judge: A Comprehensive Machine-Coded Database for the U.S. Courts of Appeals.” Reference Link
Cape, Isaac, and Jonathan P. Kastellec. 2026. “Precedent and Bargaining on the U.S. Supreme Court: An Empirical Evaluation.” Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., and Charles Cameron. 2024. “The Future of the Supreme Court: Evaluating Its Ideological Composition and Possible Selection Reforms.” Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., Alexander V. Hirsch, and Anthony Taboni. 2025. “Reviewing Fast or Slow: A Theory of Summary Reversal in the Judicial Hierarchy”. American Journal of Political Science. Reference Link
Cameron, Charles, and Jonathan P. Kastellec. 2025. “The Supreme Court: How Did We Get Here? And, What Comes Next?”. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 713: 35-56. Reference Link
Liu, Huchen, and Jonathan P. Kastellec. 2022. “The Revolving Door in Judicial Politics: Former Clerks and Agenda Setting on the U.S. Supreme Court”. American Politics Research. Reference Link
Bass, Leeann, and Jonathan P. Kastellec. 2022. “The Politics of Accountability in Supreme Court Nominations: Voter Recall and Assessment of Senator Votes on Nominees”. Political Science Research Methods. Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., and Alexander V. Hirsch. 2022. “A Theory of Policy Sabotage”. Journal of Theoretical Politics. Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., Jeffrey R. Lax, and Justin Phillips. n.d. “Estimating State Public Opinion With Multi-Level Regression and Poststratification Using R.” Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P. 2020. “Race, Context and Judging on the Courts of Appeals: Race-Based Panel Effects in Death Penalty Cases”. Justice System Journal. Replication data: Race, Context and Judging on the Courts of Appeals: Race-based Panel Effects in Death Penalty Cases. Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., Cody Gray, and Jee-Kwang Park. 2020. “From Textbook Pluralism to Modern Hyper-Pluralism: Interest Groups and Supreme Court Nominations, 1930-2017”. Journal of Law & Courts. Replication data: From Textbook Pluralism to Modern Hyper-Pluralism: Interest Groups and Supreme Court Nominations, 1930-2017. Reference Link
Kastellec, Jonathan P., Charles Cameron, and Lauren Mattioli. 2019. “Presidential Selection of Supreme Court Nominees: The Characteristics Approach”. Quarterly Journal of Political Science. Replication data: Presidential Selection of Supreme Court Nominees: The Characteristics Approach. Reference Link