Professors Clermont and Eisenberg conducted a systematic analysis of appellate court behavior and report that defendants have a substantial advantage over plaintiffs on appeal. Their analysis attempted to control for different variables that may affect the decision to appeal or the appellate outcome, including case complexity, case type, amount in controversy, and whether there had been a judge or a jury trial. Once they accounted for these variables and explored and discarded various alternate explanations, they came to the conclusion that a defendants\u27 advantage exists probably because of appellate judges\u27 misperceptions that trial level adjudicators are pro-plaintiff
Despite what Priest-Klein theory predicts, in earlier research on federal civil cases, Eisenberg fou...
This article examines the decisions of litigants in criminal cases to appeal decisions from the U.S....
We investigate theoretically and experimentally how the existence of an appeals system influences th...
Professors Clermont and Eisenberg conducted a systematic analysis of appellate court behavior and re...
Prior federal civil appellate studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more than benc...
Prior federal and state civil appeals studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more t...
The prevailing expert opinion is that jury verdicts are largely immune to appellate revision. Usin...
A recent study of appellate outcomes reveals that defendants succeed significantly more often than p...
Two findings dominate prior empirical studies of federal civil appeals. First, appeals courts are mo...
In a recent set of articles, Professor Kevin Clermont and Professor Theodore Eisenberg advance the c...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
The objective of this paper is to present a simple but flexible theoretical model of the adjudicatio...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Professor Shaffer maintains that the preservation of fair trial in civil cases requires an increased...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Despite what Priest-Klein theory predicts, in earlier research on federal civil cases, Eisenberg fou...
This article examines the decisions of litigants in criminal cases to appeal decisions from the U.S....
We investigate theoretically and experimentally how the existence of an appeals system influences th...
Professors Clermont and Eisenberg conducted a systematic analysis of appellate court behavior and re...
Prior federal civil appellate studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more than benc...
Prior federal and state civil appeals studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more t...
The prevailing expert opinion is that jury verdicts are largely immune to appellate revision. Usin...
A recent study of appellate outcomes reveals that defendants succeed significantly more often than p...
Two findings dominate prior empirical studies of federal civil appeals. First, appeals courts are mo...
In a recent set of articles, Professor Kevin Clermont and Professor Theodore Eisenberg advance the c...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
The objective of this paper is to present a simple but flexible theoretical model of the adjudicatio...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Professor Shaffer maintains that the preservation of fair trial in civil cases requires an increased...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Despite what Priest-Klein theory predicts, in earlier research on federal civil cases, Eisenberg fou...
This article examines the decisions of litigants in criminal cases to appeal decisions from the U.S....
We investigate theoretically and experimentally how the existence of an appeals system influences th...