Do specialized judges make better decisions than judges who are generalists? Specialized judges surely come to know their area of law well, but specialization might also allow judges to develop better, more reliable ways of assessing cases. We assessed this question by presenting a group of specialized judges with a set of hypothetical cases designed to elicit a reliance on common heuristics that can lead judges to make poor decisions. Although the judges resisted the influence of some of these heuristics, they also expressed a clear vulnerability to others. These results suggest that specialization does not produce better judgment
Historically, people have often expressed negative feelings toward speculators, a sentiment that mig...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
Do specialized judges make better decisions than judges who are generalists? Specialized judges sure...
“Specialization is for insects.” Robert A. HEINLEIN [1973, p. 248] Do specialized judges make better...
In this paper, we extend our prior work on generalist judges to explore whether specialization leads...
Specialization is common in medicine. Doctors become oncologists, radiologists, urologists, or even ...
Law and Economics literature recently gazed upon the "failure of judges" showing the various biases,...
Though we live in an era of hyper-specialization, the judiciary has for the most part remained the d...
Judicial opinions in securities fraud class actions frequently do not conform to standard theories o...
This dissertation incorporates the study of heuristics into the field of judicial behavior. Heuristi...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
‘How Do Judges Maximize? (The Same Way Everybody Else Does – Boundedly): Rules of Thumb in Securitie...
Historically, people have often expressed negative feelings toward speculators, a sentiment that mig...
Diverse measures are used as proxies for judicial ability, ranging from the college and law school a...
Historically, people have often expressed negative feelings toward speculators, a sentiment that mig...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
Do specialized judges make better decisions than judges who are generalists? Specialized judges sure...
“Specialization is for insects.” Robert A. HEINLEIN [1973, p. 248] Do specialized judges make better...
In this paper, we extend our prior work on generalist judges to explore whether specialization leads...
Specialization is common in medicine. Doctors become oncologists, radiologists, urologists, or even ...
Law and Economics literature recently gazed upon the "failure of judges" showing the various biases,...
Though we live in an era of hyper-specialization, the judiciary has for the most part remained the d...
Judicial opinions in securities fraud class actions frequently do not conform to standard theories o...
This dissertation incorporates the study of heuristics into the field of judicial behavior. Heuristi...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
‘How Do Judges Maximize? (The Same Way Everybody Else Does – Boundedly): Rules of Thumb in Securitie...
Historically, people have often expressed negative feelings toward speculators, a sentiment that mig...
Diverse measures are used as proxies for judicial ability, ranging from the college and law school a...
Historically, people have often expressed negative feelings toward speculators, a sentiment that mig...
Do judges make decisions that are truly impartial? A wide range of experimental and field studies re...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...