article published in law reviewLaw and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behavioral assumptions of rational choice theory, ignore the many psychological reasons that settlement negotiations can fail, yet they accurately predict that vast majority of lawsuits will settle short of formal adjudication. What explains this? We present experimental data that suggests lawyers might evaluate the settlement vs. adjudication decision from a perspective more closely akin to "rational choice theory" than will non-lawyers and, consequently, increase the observed level of settlement. We then evaluate whether the hypothesized difference between lawyers and non-lawyers is likely to lead to more efficient dispute resolution, concludin...
In this paper, the author shows the standard theoretical models of counseling clients (principals) b...
The present study investigates the effect of framing and legal role on the propensity to accept a se...
article published in law journalFor all of the ways in which the Sabia case is extraordinary, its ou...
Law and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behavioral assumptions of rational c...
In this article, we seek to substantiate psychological barriers, as illustrated by the constructs ...
The traditional economic model of settlement breakdown -- as developed by Priest and Klein -- provid...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
Most lawsuits settle, but some settle later than they should. Too many compromises occur only after ...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
published article in a law reviewThis Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory ...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
Settling a legal dispute out of court is typically a good result for both parties. However, many dis...
The present study investigates the effect of framing and legal role on the propensity to accept a se...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
In this paper, the author shows the standard theoretical models of counseling clients (principals) b...
The present study investigates the effect of framing and legal role on the propensity to accept a se...
article published in law journalFor all of the ways in which the Sabia case is extraordinary, its ou...
Law and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behavioral assumptions of rational c...
In this article, we seek to substantiate psychological barriers, as illustrated by the constructs ...
The traditional economic model of settlement breakdown -- as developed by Priest and Klein -- provid...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
Most lawsuits settle, but some settle later than they should. Too many compromises occur only after ...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
published article in a law reviewThis Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory ...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Do lawyers facilitate dispute resolution or do they instead exacerbate conflict and pose a barrier t...
Settling a legal dispute out of court is typically a good result for both parties. However, many dis...
The present study investigates the effect of framing and legal role on the propensity to accept a se...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
In this paper, the author shows the standard theoretical models of counseling clients (principals) b...
The present study investigates the effect of framing and legal role on the propensity to accept a se...
article published in law journalFor all of the ways in which the Sabia case is extraordinary, its ou...