Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In their recent book Punitive Damages, Cass Sunstein, Reid Hastie, John Payne, David Schkade, and W. Kip Viscusi present some twenty experimental studies that, they argue, show that juries award punitive damages too often, that the amounts they award are erratic and unpredictable, and that their decision-making processes are prone to various cognitive biases and other irrationalities, displaying a particular disregard of the principle of optimal deterrence. While the book offers much reliable and valuable data on how juries think about punitive damages, the authors frequently describe their results tendentiously, downplaying or omitting considera...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
In their recent Arizona Law Review article entitled What Juries Can\u27t Do Well: The Jury\u27s Perf...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation’s most populous counties as...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
This article addresses tort reform claims made in Cass R. Sunstein, et al.\u27s Punitive Damages: Ho...
In this Article, we argue that current debates on the legitimacy of punitive damages would benefit f...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
Juries in most American jurisdictions can inflict punitive damages awards against tortfeasors who ha...
This paper presents the first empirical anatysis that demonstrates that juries differ from judges in...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation\u27s most populous counties...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
Punitive damages occupy a special place in the U.S. legal system. Courts award them in very few case...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
In their recent Arizona Law Review article entitled What Juries Can\u27t Do Well: The Jury\u27s Perf...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation’s most populous counties as...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
This article addresses tort reform claims made in Cass R. Sunstein, et al.\u27s Punitive Damages: Ho...
In this Article, we argue that current debates on the legitimacy of punitive damages would benefit f...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
Juries in most American jurisdictions can inflict punitive damages awards against tortfeasors who ha...
This paper presents the first empirical anatysis that demonstrates that juries differ from judges in...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation\u27s most populous counties...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
Punitive damages occupy a special place in the U.S. legal system. Courts award them in very few case...
Proposals to provide juries with specific numerical instructions for setting punitive damages should...
In their recent Arizona Law Review article entitled What Juries Can\u27t Do Well: The Jury\u27s Perf...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation’s most populous counties as...