Inserting citations to authorities into a text, in order to increase the persuasive power of it, and prove the competence of the author, has a long tradition in science and in law. The question is whether this also applies to judicial decisions. This question is especially interesting in a continental legal culture, where following previous cases is not obligatory, there is no stare decisis, and therefore, inserting a reference to a previous case may have a different function. In 2012 we performed a computer-based citation analysis of the court decisions published under FOI act on the official website of the National Office for the Judiciary (Országos Bírósági Hivatal). The article contains four sections. The first and the second sections a...
Professor Dragich examines the no-citation rules of the federal courts of appeals in light of the pu...
Identification of relevant or similar court decisions is a core activity in legaldecision making for...
This study uses linguistic analysis and machine-learning techniques to predict summary judgment outc...
It is one of the most popular leitmotifs in comparative legal science that civil and common legal sy...
Citations, in their highly conventionalized forms, visibly indicate each texts explicit use of the p...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
In this paper, we present a case study on the structural properties of three citations networks deri...
Some of the recent network citation analyses that in continental legal settings have suggested that ...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Judges do not simply declare outcomes but also give reasons; in Canada, these reasons are typically ...
This article seeks to answer two main questions. The first is whether courts cited the same cases as...
International audienceIn this article we propose a novel methodology, which uses text similarity tec...
In common law jurisdictions, legal professionals cite facts and legal principles from precedent case...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
Professor Dragich examines the no-citation rules of the federal courts of appeals in light of the pu...
Identification of relevant or similar court decisions is a core activity in legaldecision making for...
This study uses linguistic analysis and machine-learning techniques to predict summary judgment outc...
It is one of the most popular leitmotifs in comparative legal science that civil and common legal sy...
Citations, in their highly conventionalized forms, visibly indicate each texts explicit use of the p...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
In this paper, we present a case study on the structural properties of three citations networks deri...
Some of the recent network citation analyses that in continental legal settings have suggested that ...
This article tests for the presence of bias in judicial citations within federal circuit court opini...
Judges do not simply declare outcomes but also give reasons; in Canada, these reasons are typically ...
This article seeks to answer two main questions. The first is whether courts cited the same cases as...
International audienceIn this article we propose a novel methodology, which uses text similarity tec...
In common law jurisdictions, legal professionals cite facts and legal principles from precedent case...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
True, a judge probably won\u27t rule against you if your cites are wrong, but faulty cites do reflec...
Professor Dragich examines the no-citation rules of the federal courts of appeals in light of the pu...
Identification of relevant or similar court decisions is a core activity in legaldecision making for...
This study uses linguistic analysis and machine-learning techniques to predict summary judgment outc...