Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we examine a thus far unexplored reason why perceived procedural justice can be strongly associated with litigants' trust in judges and legitimate power assigned to judges. We argue that because litigants try to make sense of what is happening at their hearings, they will tend to inhibit ongoing action in order to pause and check what is going on in the courtroom. During this state of behavioral inhibition, experiences of how fairly judges are treating them will have a sturdy impact on litigants’ reactions. This explanation implies that an experimental manipulation known to weaken behavioral inhibition should attenuate the positive association betwe...
The number of problem-solving courts has grown substantially since the mid-1990s. Research consisten...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people's reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
This paper argues that when people try to sort out whether they are treated in just or unjust manner...
Judges are human beings. Is their behavior therefore subject to the same effects that psychology and...
This dissertation studies and challenges the importance of the social psychological concept of perce...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
The influence of judges’ behavior on procedural justice was analyzed in a field study, observing the...
Procedural justice research primarily examines disputants' reactions to court, where outcomes are de...
This paper examines the hypothesis that litigants' perceived procedural justice is positively associ...
The perception of being treated fairly during decision-making processes is an important topic in the...
We experimentally investigate the determinants of judicial decisions in a setting resembling real-wo...
The number of problem-solving courts has grown substantially since the mid-1990s. Research consisten...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people's reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
Using two randomized controlled courtroom experiments on actual litigants at court hearings, we exam...
This paper argues that when people try to sort out whether they are treated in just or unjust manner...
Judges are human beings. Is their behavior therefore subject to the same effects that psychology and...
This dissertation studies and challenges the importance of the social psychological concept of perce...
When criminal defendants appear before their court hearings, are they concerned only with the outcom...
The influence of judges’ behavior on procedural justice was analyzed in a field study, observing the...
Procedural justice research primarily examines disputants' reactions to court, where outcomes are de...
This paper examines the hypothesis that litigants' perceived procedural justice is positively associ...
The perception of being treated fairly during decision-making processes is an important topic in the...
We experimentally investigate the determinants of judicial decisions in a setting resembling real-wo...
The number of problem-solving courts has grown substantially since the mid-1990s. Research consisten...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
Theorizing on procedural justice has assumed that people's reactions to outgroup authorities are to ...