This study empirically tests the proposition that law students adopt different conceptions of the judge’s role in adjudication based on whether they first study intentional torts, negligence, or strict liability. The authors conducted an anonymous survey of more than 450 students enrolled in eight law schools at the beginning, mid-point, and end of the first semester of law school. The students were prompted to indicate to what extent they believed the judge’s role to be one of rule application and, conversely, to what extent it was one of considering social, economic, and ideological factors. The survey found that while all three groups of students shifted toward a belief that judges consider social, economic, and ideological factors, the ...
Previous research demonstrates that lawyers and law students are, on average, prone to overconfidenc...
This short article presents the general outlines of a lecture that I usually give to my first-year c...
We should begin with a confession of ignorance. We have no jurisprudence of legal scholarship. Schol...
This study empirically tests the proposition that law students adopt different conceptions of the ju...
In 1988, hundreds of federal district judges were suddenly confronted with the need to render a deci...
The thesis of this Article, simply stated, is that judicial education makes sense only against the b...
Since the work of Erikson, researchers have striven to compile data and literature on the stages and...
Judges take part in a variety of non-adjudicative tasks that shape the structure of litigation. In a...
Judges decide complex cases in rapid succession but are limited by cognitive constraints. Consequent...
This exploratory essay is an admixture of amateur psychology, moral theory, and jurisprudence. It gr...
Over the last 20 years, a rich body of literature has emerged to describe the increasingly complex s...
Scholarly and professional perceptions of the role of the judiciary, and hence of the responsibility...
There are three prime roles the trial judge should play in clinical legal education: (1) to become i...
In brief, the Henderson, Pearson, and Siliciano casebook includes materials on ethics, problems and ...
This Article introduces science and research on the social psychology of judging with the aim of adv...
Previous research demonstrates that lawyers and law students are, on average, prone to overconfidenc...
This short article presents the general outlines of a lecture that I usually give to my first-year c...
We should begin with a confession of ignorance. We have no jurisprudence of legal scholarship. Schol...
This study empirically tests the proposition that law students adopt different conceptions of the ju...
In 1988, hundreds of federal district judges were suddenly confronted with the need to render a deci...
The thesis of this Article, simply stated, is that judicial education makes sense only against the b...
Since the work of Erikson, researchers have striven to compile data and literature on the stages and...
Judges take part in a variety of non-adjudicative tasks that shape the structure of litigation. In a...
Judges decide complex cases in rapid succession but are limited by cognitive constraints. Consequent...
This exploratory essay is an admixture of amateur psychology, moral theory, and jurisprudence. It gr...
Over the last 20 years, a rich body of literature has emerged to describe the increasingly complex s...
Scholarly and professional perceptions of the role of the judiciary, and hence of the responsibility...
There are three prime roles the trial judge should play in clinical legal education: (1) to become i...
In brief, the Henderson, Pearson, and Siliciano casebook includes materials on ethics, problems and ...
This Article introduces science and research on the social psychology of judging with the aim of adv...
Previous research demonstrates that lawyers and law students are, on average, prone to overconfidenc...
This short article presents the general outlines of a lecture that I usually give to my first-year c...
We should begin with a confession of ignorance. We have no jurisprudence of legal scholarship. Schol...