The legal community has been debating the question of who should select and provide expert witnesses at trial: the litigant or the judge? Using a persuasion-game framework, I show that there is a trade-off. On the one hand, the litigant is willing to consult an expert even when the judge is reluctant to appoint her own experts due to high costs. On the other hand, given the same amount of expert advice, the judge can make a more accurate decision when using a court-appointed expert's advice at trial. I show that the cost of expert advice is an important factor in this trade-off and, therefore, in the argument for the reform toward a centralized system for expert witnesses
The dispute over whether litigants may use experts to run unexamined hearsay into the trial record i...
“Blind expertise” has been proposed as an institutional solution to the problem of bias in expert wi...
The factual framework of modem litigation has become increasingly technical and complex; this develo...
The legal community has been debating the question of who should select and provide expert witnesses...
The history of the admissibility standard for expert testimony in American courtrooms reveals that t...
In contrast with the legal systems of many other countries, the use of privately-retained experts is...
International audienceDeparting from the observation that neutral experts are increasingly appointed...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals placed federal judges in the ...
Many scholars lament the increasing complexity of jury trials and question whether the testimony of ...
The trial of Robert E. Chambers, Jr., for the murder of eighteen year old Jennifer Levin in Central ...
Debate concerning the limits of judicial power over expert witnesses remains active and in its early...
Our real world outside the ivory towers of academia and the courts grows more and more complex. The ...
We investigate the potential impact of various proposed reforms intended to improvethe quality of ex...
In this dissertation, I explore whether laypersons, particularly individuals who serve as judges and...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
The dispute over whether litigants may use experts to run unexamined hearsay into the trial record i...
“Blind expertise” has been proposed as an institutional solution to the problem of bias in expert wi...
The factual framework of modem litigation has become increasingly technical and complex; this develo...
The legal community has been debating the question of who should select and provide expert witnesses...
The history of the admissibility standard for expert testimony in American courtrooms reveals that t...
In contrast with the legal systems of many other countries, the use of privately-retained experts is...
International audienceDeparting from the observation that neutral experts are increasingly appointed...
The Supreme Court’s decision in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals placed federal judges in the ...
Many scholars lament the increasing complexity of jury trials and question whether the testimony of ...
The trial of Robert E. Chambers, Jr., for the murder of eighteen year old Jennifer Levin in Central ...
Debate concerning the limits of judicial power over expert witnesses remains active and in its early...
Our real world outside the ivory towers of academia and the courts grows more and more complex. The ...
We investigate the potential impact of various proposed reforms intended to improvethe quality of ex...
In this dissertation, I explore whether laypersons, particularly individuals who serve as judges and...
Judges and juries must make momentous and intricate decisions. The temptation is overwhelming for th...
The dispute over whether litigants may use experts to run unexamined hearsay into the trial record i...
“Blind expertise” has been proposed as an institutional solution to the problem of bias in expert wi...
The factual framework of modem litigation has become increasingly technical and complex; this develo...