How and whether judges should be held accountable is a key issue in the design of a legal system. Thirty-seven of the forty-eight continental states use some method of judicial selection which involves a direct role for citizens in selecting or re-appointing the judiciary. We identify two theoretical reasons why the method used for choosing judges is important – (i) a selection effect if the competence or underlying preferences of judges is affected, (ii) an incentive effect if the judges who are chosen behave differently because of the method used for their reappointment. This paper uses data from the U.S. to investigate whether judicial selection methods affect the number of employment discrimination charges filed for the period 1973- 200...
Judicial independence is not only a necessary condition for the impartiality of judges, it can also ...
We should distinguish the process that initially selects a judge from the process that determines wh...
The standard model of judicial behavior suggests that judges primarily care about deciding cases in ...
How and whether judges should be held accountable is a key issue in the design of a legal system. Th...
One of the most striking changes in labor market policy of the past fifty years has come in the form...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
Abstract Do judges selected by merit review commissions perform better than elected j...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
The conventional wisdom among many legal scholars is that judicial independence can best be achieved...
This paper provides evidence on the effect of electoral institutions on the performance of public of...
This paper explores the impact that systems of judicial elections have on judges’ decision making. I...
How best to select judges has been the subject of great debate ever since the founding of the United...
In this overview, I begin by describing the five different systems of state judicial selection that ...
Each year, more than 90 percent of civil and felony crime cases in the United States are handled by ...
Judicial independence is not only a necessary condition for the impartiality of judges, it can also ...
We should distinguish the process that initially selects a judge from the process that determines wh...
The standard model of judicial behavior suggests that judges primarily care about deciding cases in ...
How and whether judges should be held accountable is a key issue in the design of a legal system. Th...
One of the most striking changes in labor market policy of the past fifty years has come in the form...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
Abstract Do judges selected by merit review commissions perform better than elected j...
Conventional wisdom holds that appointed judges are superior to elected judges because appointed jud...
The scholarly debate about how to select state judges has been ongoing for decades; the public debat...
The conventional wisdom among many legal scholars is that judicial independence can best be achieved...
This paper provides evidence on the effect of electoral institutions on the performance of public of...
This paper explores the impact that systems of judicial elections have on judges’ decision making. I...
How best to select judges has been the subject of great debate ever since the founding of the United...
In this overview, I begin by describing the five different systems of state judicial selection that ...
Each year, more than 90 percent of civil and felony crime cases in the United States are handled by ...
Judicial independence is not only a necessary condition for the impartiality of judges, it can also ...
We should distinguish the process that initially selects a judge from the process that determines wh...
The standard model of judicial behavior suggests that judges primarily care about deciding cases in ...