As Alicke and Govorun (The self in social judgment, Psychology Press, New York, 2005, p. 85) observed, “most people are average, but few people believe it.” Optimism and other forms of inflated perception of the self lead parties to exercise suboptimal precautions when undertaking risky activities and often undermine the incentive effects of tort rules. In this paper, we show that the presence of optimism undermines several critical assumptions, upon which law and economics scholars have relied when modeling the incentive effects of tort law. We construct a model representing the incentives of “optimistic” tortfeasors and victims, and consider mechanisms for mitigating the effects of biased decision-making. We show that in the presence of o...
This Article considers the possibility of imposing liability in torts for a wrongfully created risk ...
Many tort cases are characterized by two interrelated elements: “role uncertainty”, which occurs whe...
The standard economic model of bilateral precaution concludes that (in the absence of uncertainty, m...
As Alicke and Govorun (The self in social judgment, Psychology Press, New York, 2005, p. 85) observe...
As Alicke and Govorun (The self in social judgment, Psychology Press, New York, 2005, p. 85) observe...
Due to their unrealistic optimism, people believe that risks are less likely to materialize for them...
This paper examines the effect of tort rules on behavior if people are optimistic or insensitive rel...
Overconfidence is an overestimation of one’s own ability that is often associated with an underesti...
Economists and lawyer-economists have extensively analyzed the efficiency of negligence rules in tor...
Traditional economic models of tort law assign determinate roles to parties, modeling their behavior...
This paper analyzes the effects of evidentiary uncertainty on people's incentives to abide by rules...
Conventional wisdom in the economic analysis of tort law holds that legal errors distort incentives,...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This article compares the classic liability rules, negligence and strict liability, under the hypoth...
Under the conventional tort law paradigm, a tortfeasor behaves unreasonably when two conditions are ...
This Article considers the possibility of imposing liability in torts for a wrongfully created risk ...
Many tort cases are characterized by two interrelated elements: “role uncertainty”, which occurs whe...
The standard economic model of bilateral precaution concludes that (in the absence of uncertainty, m...
As Alicke and Govorun (The self in social judgment, Psychology Press, New York, 2005, p. 85) observe...
As Alicke and Govorun (The self in social judgment, Psychology Press, New York, 2005, p. 85) observe...
Due to their unrealistic optimism, people believe that risks are less likely to materialize for them...
This paper examines the effect of tort rules on behavior if people are optimistic or insensitive rel...
Overconfidence is an overestimation of one’s own ability that is often associated with an underesti...
Economists and lawyer-economists have extensively analyzed the efficiency of negligence rules in tor...
Traditional economic models of tort law assign determinate roles to parties, modeling their behavior...
This paper analyzes the effects of evidentiary uncertainty on people's incentives to abide by rules...
Conventional wisdom in the economic analysis of tort law holds that legal errors distort incentives,...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This article compares the classic liability rules, negligence and strict liability, under the hypoth...
Under the conventional tort law paradigm, a tortfeasor behaves unreasonably when two conditions are ...
This Article considers the possibility of imposing liability in torts for a wrongfully created risk ...
Many tort cases are characterized by two interrelated elements: “role uncertainty”, which occurs whe...
The standard economic model of bilateral precaution concludes that (in the absence of uncertainty, m...