The concept of the Martin–Quinn score was published in a 2002 paper by
Andrew D. Martin and Kevin M. Quinn. MQ scores are dynamic, as each decision made by a judge creates another data point that can be integrated into the model. The MQ score places the justices on a continuum of more liberal to more conservative. As of 2007, scores roughly ranged between -8 and 4, with the lowest score of about -8 attributed to
William O. Douglas (tenure on the USSC from 1939 to 1975) and the highest score of about 4.5 attributed to
William Rehnquist (tenure from 1972 to 2005). The largest shift in score between judges on the same Supreme Court seat since 1953 came when
Thurgood Marshall (tenure from 1967 to 1990) was replaced by
Clarence Thomas.
Ward Farnsworth wrote that while the MQ model has ingenuity and promise, it falls short of proving what it aims to. He criticized the methodology of MQ scores, saying that MQ scores only take into account whether a judge affirms or reverses a ruling, and not the ideological outcome their action supports. In part, "the relationship between the spectrum generated by the [Martin–Quinn] model and the spectrum of policy decisions in the real world is a matter of guesswork. There is no inherent relationship between them. ==Application==