With astounding speed and comprehensiveness, experimental approaches to law and economics have infiltrated the legal academy. Slightly more than a decade ago, one could find only a handful of studies that attempted to bring the insights and methodologies of experimental economics and cognitive and social psychology to law. Today, on the other hand, one finds an array of experimental studies on legal topics being conducted at universities in North America, Europe, Israel, and elsewhere. New scholars are being encouraged into the field not only indirectly through the field’s salience and popularity, but alsomore directly and tangibly through the establishment of scholarship competitions and conferences aimed specifically at junior scholars. A...