This essay reviews Punitive Damages: How Juries Decide by Cass Sunstein, et al. The book provides a good example of a recent trend: the use of behavioralist research to justify surprisingly paternalistic legal reforms. While critics of behavioralism often contend that its theoretical foundations are weak, this approach is unlikely to prove an effective rejoinder in the new debate about what kinds of paternalism are made permissible by human irrationality . A better approach: (1) notes the lack of a nexus between behavioralism and the supposed emergent necessity of paternalist reforms; and (2) suggests that juror unwillingness to apply cost-benefit formula provides the true motivating force for the new paternalism in law and economics. Rath...
Legal scholars commonly argue that the widespread presence of cognitive errors in judgment justifies...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
A brief review of psychological theories of juror decision making is followed by an introduction to ...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
In this Article, we argue that current debates on the legitimacy of punitive damages would benefit f...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
Behavioral law and economics scholars who advance paternalistic policy proposals typically employ st...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
This Essay, prepared in connection with the Marquette University Conference on Plea Bargaining: Unde...
All of social science is based on the assumption that people act rationally, in a logical, unemotion...
Legal scholars increasingly rely on a behavioral analysis of judgment and decision making to explain...
Inside the Juror presents the most interesting and sophisticated work to date on juror decision maki...
First, the growing catalog of cognitive quirks may lead behavioralists to hastily adopt “non-rationa...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
Legal scholars commonly argue that the widespread presence of cognitive errors in judgment justifies...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
A brief review of psychological theories of juror decision making is followed by an introduction to ...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
In this Article, we argue that current debates on the legitimacy of punitive damages would benefit f...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
Behavioral law and economics scholars who advance paternalistic policy proposals typically employ st...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
Are juries rational or irrational? In the context of punitive damage awards, jury decisions suffer f...
This Essay, prepared in connection with the Marquette University Conference on Plea Bargaining: Unde...
All of social science is based on the assumption that people act rationally, in a logical, unemotion...
Legal scholars increasingly rely on a behavioral analysis of judgment and decision making to explain...
Inside the Juror presents the most interesting and sophisticated work to date on juror decision maki...
First, the growing catalog of cognitive quirks may lead behavioralists to hastily adopt “non-rationa...
Although proponents argue that peremptory challenges make juries more impartial by eliminating “extr...
Legal scholars commonly argue that the widespread presence of cognitive errors in judgment justifies...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
A brief review of psychological theories of juror decision making is followed by an introduction to ...