Author

Isaac Unah

Associate Professor of Political Science, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill - Cited by 685 - Judicial Politics - Supreme Court - Death Penalty - Bureaucratic Politics.

Biography

Isaac Unah currently works at the Department of Political Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Isaac does research in Law and Courts, Public Policy and Race, Ethnicity and Politics. His current projects focus on the symbolism of the death penalty and Judicial decision making.
Title
Cited by
Year
US Supreme Court decision making, case salience, and the attitudinal model
I Unah, AM HancockLaw & Policy 28 (3), 295-320, 2006200
124
2006
Sharks and minnows in the war on drugs: A study of quantity, race and drug type in drug arrests
JE Kennedy, I Unah, K WahlersUC Davis L. Rev. 52, 729, 2018201
28
2018
16
2016
US Supreme Court Justices and Public Mood
I Unah, K Rosano, KD MilamJL & Pol. 30, 293, 2014201
15
2014
Media exposure and racialized perceptions of inequities in criminal justice
V Wright, I UnahSocial Sciences 6 (3), 67, 2017201
15
2017
The Courts of International Trade: Judicial Specialization
I UnahExpertise and Bureaucratic Policy Making, 1998199
10
1998
US Supreme Court Decision Making
I Unah, A HancockCase Salience, 2006200
8
2006
Race, politics, and the process of capital punishment in North Carolina
I Unah, JC Bogerannual meeting of the North Carolina Political Science Association. February …, 2009200
5
2009
Divided by Race
I Unah, V WrightDeadly injustice: Trayvon martin, race, and the criminal justice system 1, 25, 2015201
4
2015
Race and the death penalty in North Carolina
I Unah, JC BogerCell 919, 39-3915, 2001200
4
2001
When Governors Speak up for Justice: Punishment Politics and Mass Incarceration in the American States
I Unah, E CogginsJournal of Political Science and Public Affairs 1, 1-12, 20120
3
2013
What is so Special about Specialized Courts in the United States?
I Unah, R WilliamsRoutledge Handbook of Judicial Behavior, New York, NY: Routledge, Inc.(2018), 2018201
3
2018
Punishment Politics: Gubernatorial Rhetoric, Political Conflict, and the Instrumental Explanation of Mass Incarceration in the American States
I Unah, E CogginsPolitical Conflict, and the Instrumental Explanation of Mass Incarceration …, 01101
2
2011
The decline of capital punishment in North Carolina
F Baumgartner, I Unahannual meeting of the American Society of Criminology. San Francisco, CA …, 01001
2
2010