Shadow Docket Watch
Supreme Court: A simple list of cases on the Supreme Court shadow docket, also known as its applications docket.
shadowdocket.netThe “shadow docket” is the nickname for the U.S. Supreme Court’s emergency docket—orders issued quickly on motions like requests to pause (“stay”) lower-court rulings—often with little explanation compared with the Court’s regular, fully argued process.[1]
In recent reporting, the shadow docket has been described as being used more intensely to resolve high-stakes disputes—especially involving the executive branch and major policy areas—by issuing fast orders that can effectively decide outcomes before the case reaches the Court’s normal merits briefing and argument.[2][4]
Commentary and trackers also focus on concerns that the Court’s increased reliance on emergency procedures reduces transparency (for example, less guidance to lower courts and limited written reasoning in some orders).[3][7]
If you tell me which “latest news” angle you want (abortion, elections, immigration, climate/regulation, student loans, or just “overall latest emergency orders”), I can summarize the most relevant recent items in that category.
Supreme Court: A simple list of cases on the Supreme Court shadow docket, also known as its applications docket.
shadowdocket.netThe Supreme Court is deciding cases that involve critical decisions affecting our everyday lives while using a procedure that provides little to no transparency to the public.
www.demos.orgThe Court is ruling on challenges to government actions on its emergency docket, often without explaining its decisions or providing guidance to lower courts.
www.brennancenter.orgSupreme Court decisions are looming on student loans, elections, abortion and climate
www.cnn.comCourtly Observations is a recurring series by Erwin Chemerinsky that focuses on what the Supreme Court’s decisions will mean for the law, for lawyers and lower courts, and for people’s lives. […]
www.scotusblog.comThe Supreme Court’s growing use of its “Shadow Docket” bypasses deliberation, fast-tracking Trump-era rulings with massive political consequences.
www.dcreport.orgThe conservative justices are increasingly using a secretive process to issue consequential decisions.
www.brennancenter.org