This study of federal court decisionmaking asks whether characteristics of a jurist including age, race, gender, and work experience, can affect results in the context of the nation’s most frequently litigated administrative law dispute—social security disability claims. SSDI cases by and large are similar, turning most frequently on claims of mental illness and muscular skeletal pain. Thus, there is ample room for discretion among ALJs and federal judges in determining whether an applicant is entitled to benefits. The results are remarkable both in what they showed and did not show. First, decisionmaking patterns among district court judges and magistrates both reveal the same kind of inconsistencies that plague ALJ adjudication more gener...
In 1990, the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) was enacted to support disabled Americans as they s...
For many years, Congress has had various bills before it to create alternatives to the current pract...
The Social Security Advisory Board, the Congressional Budget Office, and independent researchers at ...
This study of federal court decisionmaking asks whether characteristics of a jurist including age, r...
Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) play an important role in the Social Security Administration (SSA) ...
A person who has sought and failed to obtain disability benefits from the Social Security Administra...
Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) play an important role in the Social Security Administration (SSA) ...
Article III courts annually review thousands of decisions rendered by Social Security Administrative...
This Article addresses a relatively narrow but consequential problem in the system: the inadequacy o...
Applicants for Social Security Disability benefits whose applications have twice been rejected can a...
An administrative law judge\u27s decision to deny a claim for Social Security Disability Insurance b...
Hundreds of thousands of people have lost or been denied Social Security Disability Insurance and Su...
With over three million disability claims annually filed with the U.S. Social Security Administratio...
In the largest system of federal adjudication—Social Security disability adjudication—outcomes depen...
Disability determinations made by the Social Security Administration’s administrative law judges are...
In 1990, the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) was enacted to support disabled Americans as they s...
For many years, Congress has had various bills before it to create alternatives to the current pract...
The Social Security Advisory Board, the Congressional Budget Office, and independent researchers at ...
This study of federal court decisionmaking asks whether characteristics of a jurist including age, r...
Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) play an important role in the Social Security Administration (SSA) ...
A person who has sought and failed to obtain disability benefits from the Social Security Administra...
Administrative Law Judges (ALJs) play an important role in the Social Security Administration (SSA) ...
Article III courts annually review thousands of decisions rendered by Social Security Administrative...
This Article addresses a relatively narrow but consequential problem in the system: the inadequacy o...
Applicants for Social Security Disability benefits whose applications have twice been rejected can a...
An administrative law judge\u27s decision to deny a claim for Social Security Disability Insurance b...
Hundreds of thousands of people have lost or been denied Social Security Disability Insurance and Su...
With over three million disability claims annually filed with the U.S. Social Security Administratio...
In the largest system of federal adjudication—Social Security disability adjudication—outcomes depen...
Disability determinations made by the Social Security Administration’s administrative law judges are...
In 1990, the Americans with Disability Act (ADA) was enacted to support disabled Americans as they s...
For many years, Congress has had various bills before it to create alternatives to the current pract...
The Social Security Advisory Board, the Congressional Budget Office, and independent researchers at ...