Photo of Sara Benesh

Sara Benesh

  • Professor, Political Science
  • Director, L&S Curriculum and Governance
  • Secretary of the College, Letters & Science

Education

  • PhD., Political Science, Michigan State University, 1999
  • MA, Political Science, Michigan State University, 1997
  • BA, Political Science and English, Saint Norbert College, 1995

Office Hours

By Appt

Courses Taught

  • POL SCI 250 - Law & Society
  • POL SCI 410 - Law Through Popular Culture
  • POL SCI 412 - Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
  • POL SCI 417 - The Supreme Court
  • POL SCI 725 - Judicial Politics and Behavior

Research Interests

  • Judicial decision making
    • U.S. Courts of Appeals
    • U.S. Supreme Court
    • State courts of last resort
    • Lower federal and state courts
  • Legitimacy of courts and institutions.

Current Projects

  • U.S. Supreme Court Justice Appearances (with Wendy Martinek, Taraleigh Davis, and Michael Catalano)
    • UWM SURF Project

Books

Segal, Jeffrey A., Harold J. Spaeth, and Sara C. Benesh. 2005. The Supreme Court in the American Legal System. New York: Cambridge University Press.  
Benesh, Sara C. 2002. The U.S. Court of Appeals and the Law of Confessions: Perspectives on the Hierarchy of Justice. New York: LFB Scholarly Publishing.

Selected Publications

Edelstein, Benjamin and Sara C. Benesh. 2024. "Recusal as Remedy: Disincentivizing Donors." State Politics and Policy Quarterly 24(1): 77-98.
Benesh, Sara C., David A. Armstrong, and Zachary Wallander. 2020. “Advisors to Elites: Untangling Their Effect” Journal of Law and Courts 8(1): 51-73.
Benesh, Sara C., Jacobson, Jennifer K., Schaeffer, Amanda, and Simmons, Nicole. 2014. “Supreme Court Monitoring Via GVRs” Justice System Journal 35(2): 162-177.
Benesh, Sara C. 2013. "Judicial Elections: Directions in the Study of Institutional Legitimacy." Judicature 96(4): 204-208.
Luse, Jennifer K., Geoffrey McGovern, Wendy L. Martinek, and Sara C. Benesh. 2009. “'Such Inferior Courts . . .': Compliance by Circuits with Jurisprudential Regimes” American Politics Research 37: 75-106.

UWM Land Acknowledgement: We acknowledge in Milwaukee that we are on traditional Potawatomi, Ho-Chunk and Menominee homeland along the southwest shores of Michigami, North America’s largest system of freshwater lakes, where the Milwaukee, Menominee and Kinnickinnic rivers meet and the people of Wisconsin’s sovereign Anishinaabe, Ho-Chunk, Menominee, Oneida and Mohican nations remain present.   |   To learn more, visit the Electa Quinney Institute website.