Measuring legal change--i.e., change in the way that judges decide cases--presents a vexing problem. In response to a change in the behavior of courts, plaintiffs and defendants will change their patterns of filing and settling cases. Priest and Klein\u27s (1984) selection model predicts that no matter how favorable or unfavorable the legal standard is to plaintiffs, the rate at which plaintiffs prevail in litigation will not pre- dictably change; thus, legal change cannot be measured with data on court outcomes. In this paper, I extend the selection model to develop a methodology for measuring legal change, even in the presence of selection effects. I apply this methodology to a recent, high profile Supreme Court case, Bell Atlantic Corp. ...
Political scientists have long been interested in what impact judicial decisions have on their inten...
In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decis...
Do the decisions of appellate courts matter in the real world? The American judicial system, legal e...
Measuring legal change--i.e., change in the way that judges decide cases--presents a vexing problem....
The claim that the common law displays an economic logic is a centerpiece of the positive economic t...
Priest and Klein argued in 1984 that, because of selection effects, the percentage of litigated case...
Recent law and economics scholarship has produced much theoretical and empirical work on how and why...
In light of the gateway role that the pleading standard can play in our civil litigation system, mea...
This paper integrates the literatures on the social value of lawsuits, the evolution of the law, and...
Following its landmark decisions in Bell Atlantic v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, the Supreme Cour...
It is common in the legal academy to describe judicial decision trends leading to new common law rul...
Judicial impact studies have generally found widespread compliance by lower courts. Often, however, ...
We develop a stylized game theoretic model of litigant behavior to study the effects of increased pl...
Legal change is a fact of life, and the need to deal with it has spawned a number of complicated bod...
Predictive judicial analytics holds the promise of increasing efficiency and fairness of law. Judici...
Political scientists have long been interested in what impact judicial decisions have on their inten...
In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decis...
Do the decisions of appellate courts matter in the real world? The American judicial system, legal e...
Measuring legal change--i.e., change in the way that judges decide cases--presents a vexing problem....
The claim that the common law displays an economic logic is a centerpiece of the positive economic t...
Priest and Klein argued in 1984 that, because of selection effects, the percentage of litigated case...
Recent law and economics scholarship has produced much theoretical and empirical work on how and why...
In light of the gateway role that the pleading standard can play in our civil litigation system, mea...
This paper integrates the literatures on the social value of lawsuits, the evolution of the law, and...
Following its landmark decisions in Bell Atlantic v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal, the Supreme Cour...
It is common in the legal academy to describe judicial decision trends leading to new common law rul...
Judicial impact studies have generally found widespread compliance by lower courts. Often, however, ...
We develop a stylized game theoretic model of litigant behavior to study the effects of increased pl...
Legal change is a fact of life, and the need to deal with it has spawned a number of complicated bod...
Predictive judicial analytics holds the promise of increasing efficiency and fairness of law. Judici...
Political scientists have long been interested in what impact judicial decisions have on their inten...
In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decis...
Do the decisions of appellate courts matter in the real world? The American judicial system, legal e...