This chapter presents a public choice theory of criminal procedure. The core idea is that criminal procedure is best understood as a set of rules designed to thwart attempts to use the state\u27s law enforcement power in a predatory fashion or in order to transfer wealth generally. For the most part we focus on a set of core procedural protections that can be considered long-established norms
Public choice, sometimes referred to as the economic theory of legislation, applies game theory and ...
This thesis is intended to discover a unified and scientific theory of breaches of criminal procedur...
In the 1980s scholars began applying Positive Political Theory (PPT) to study public law. This chapt...
This chapter reviews the economics of criminal procedure, proceeding through four topics in the lite...
We provide an additional justification for the pro-defendant bias in Anglo-American criminal procedu...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
We provide a more persuasive justification for the pro-defendant bias in Anglo-American criminal pro...
Criminal procedure has undergone several well-documented shifts in its doctrinal foundations since t...
Economic theory of criminal law consists of normative and positive parts. Normative economic theory,...
This chapter discusses empirical approaches to criminal procedure, focusing on three broad and recur...
In function, if not in form, criminal procedure is a type of delegation. It requires courts to selec...
Criminal procedure has long set a boundary between public and private in criminal enforcement: gener...
Public choice theory has been used to explain a wide range of observable facts. It has also been inf...
Rules of procedure determine and reflect the transaction costs of operating a legal system. An effic...
In The Pathological Politics of Criminal Law, Bill Stuntz provides a powerful critique of the modern...
Public choice, sometimes referred to as the economic theory of legislation, applies game theory and ...
This thesis is intended to discover a unified and scientific theory of breaches of criminal procedur...
In the 1980s scholars began applying Positive Political Theory (PPT) to study public law. This chapt...
This chapter reviews the economics of criminal procedure, proceeding through four topics in the lite...
We provide an additional justification for the pro-defendant bias in Anglo-American criminal procedu...
In this Article I provide an economic analysis of criminal law as a preference-shaping policy. I arg...
We provide a more persuasive justification for the pro-defendant bias in Anglo-American criminal pro...
Criminal procedure has undergone several well-documented shifts in its doctrinal foundations since t...
Economic theory of criminal law consists of normative and positive parts. Normative economic theory,...
This chapter discusses empirical approaches to criminal procedure, focusing on three broad and recur...
In function, if not in form, criminal procedure is a type of delegation. It requires courts to selec...
Criminal procedure has long set a boundary between public and private in criminal enforcement: gener...
Public choice theory has been used to explain a wide range of observable facts. It has also been inf...
Rules of procedure determine and reflect the transaction costs of operating a legal system. An effic...
In The Pathological Politics of Criminal Law, Bill Stuntz provides a powerful critique of the modern...
Public choice, sometimes referred to as the economic theory of legislation, applies game theory and ...
This thesis is intended to discover a unified and scientific theory of breaches of criminal procedur...
In the 1980s scholars began applying Positive Political Theory (PPT) to study public law. This chapt...