Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two categories of reasons. One consists of arguments based on informational disparities. The other consists of psychological arguments. This paper explores the psychological theory. It presents a model of litigation driven by risk preferences and examines the model’s implications for trials and settlements. The model suggests a foundation in Prospect Theory for the Mutual Optimism model of litigation. The model’s implications for plaintiff win rates, settlement patterns, and informational asymmetry with respect to the degree of risk aversion are examined
In this article, we seek to substantiate psychological barriers, as illustrated by the constructs ...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
The traditional economic model of settlement breakdown -- as developed by Priest and Klein -- provid...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
published article in a law reviewThis Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory ...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
This Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory to develop a positive theory of f...
This Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory to develop a positive theory of f...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
Law and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behavioral assumptions of rational c...
Empirical evidence suggests that lawyers and litigants are systematically opti-mistic with respect t...
article published in law reviewLaw and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behav...
For psychologists, bounded rationality reflects the presence of cognitive dissonance and/or inconsis...
In this article, we seek to substantiate psychological barriers, as illustrated by the constructs ...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
The traditional economic model of settlement breakdown -- as developed by Priest and Klein -- provid...
Why do some legal disputes fail to settle? From a bird’s eye view, the literature offers two catego...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
published article in a law reviewThis Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory ...
Legal scholars have developed two dominant theories of litigation behavior: the Economic Theory of S...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
This Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory to develop a positive theory of f...
This Article uses an often-overlooked component of prospect theory to develop a positive theory of f...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
Law and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behavioral assumptions of rational c...
Empirical evidence suggests that lawyers and litigants are systematically opti-mistic with respect t...
article published in law reviewLaw and economics models of litigation settlement, based on the behav...
For psychologists, bounded rationality reflects the presence of cognitive dissonance and/or inconsis...
In this article, we seek to substantiate psychological barriers, as illustrated by the constructs ...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
The traditional economic model of settlement breakdown -- as developed by Priest and Klein -- provid...