Even Best Friends Sometimes Disagree: SCOTUS Voting Blocs, with Adam Feldman

Supreme Court Justices' voting practices are predictable—sometimes. While justices tend to vote within specific groups, the organization of the groups is harder to predict. The justices occasionally deviate from their traditional voting alignments. Adam Feldman will discuss some possible answers to why SCOTUS justices sometimes find themselves in strange company. 


 When: Tuesday, April 16 at 11:30 a.m. (registration), 12:00 p.m. (lunch)

Where: First Floor Conference Room, 2040 Main Street, 1st Floor, Irvine, CA.
(Please get your parking ticket validated in the lobby before or after entering the venue.)

Cost: $30/members, $35/non-members, $20/students, for lunch and 1 hour of MCLE credit (the Federalist Society is a California State Bar approved provider of MCLE).

RSVP and Pay: To RSVP and pay by credit card, please visit the Federalist Society event page Even Best Friends Sometimes Disagree: SCOTUS Voting Blocs with Adam Feldman | The Federalist Society (fedsoc.org)

To pay by cash or check at the door, please send an RSVP to Tim Kowal at OCFedSocPresident@gmail.com and make checks payable to “The Federalist Society.”

*** Please email us if you have have any dietary concerns. ***

About Adam Feldman

From 2018-2020, Dr. Adam Feldman was the statistics editor for SCOTUSblog. Adam is the creator and author of the Empirical SCOTUS blog. He has a law degree from U.C. Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law and practiced law as a trial lawyer for three years before starting a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Southern California. He has eleven published or forthcoming articles in law and peer-reviewed journals and is completing a postdoctoral fellowship through Columbia Law School.


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