This Essay, prepared in connection with the Marquette University Conference on Plea Bargaining: Understanding and Improving Dispute Resolution in Criminal Law, critiques the application of behavioral law and economics to the criminal justice system. It offers two reasons to be skeptical of the usefulness of phenomena such as heuristics and biases to explain the conduct of criminal defendants. First, the psychological atypicality of criminal defendants suggests that heuristics and biases may operate differently in that population than in the more typical populations on which the underlying research is based. Second, the situational nature of behavior counsels against the straightforward application of behavioral law and economics principles ...
In this Essay I first review the standard law-and-economics model of how rational potential criminal...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
Ambiguity aversion is a person\u27s rational attitude towards the indeterminacy of the probability t...
This Essay, prepared in connection with the Marquette University Conference on Plea Bargaining: Unde...
A behavioral economics literature identifies how behaviorally-derived assumptions affect the economi...
Cognitive researchers have identified numerous ways in which human reasoning diverges from the ratio...
New work on heuristics and biases has explored the role of emotions and affect; the idea of “dual pr...
This dissertation incorporates the study of heuristics into the field of judicial behavior. Heuristi...
This Essay explores the concept of attorney competence in a criminal justice system dominated by ple...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
article published in law reviewIn this essay, written for a symposium on The Emerging Interdisciplin...
Although economists have been actively engaged in research on criminal sentencing, the synergies bet...
In this Essay I first review the standard law-and-economics model of how rational potential criminal...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
Ambiguity aversion is a person\u27s rational attitude towards the indeterminacy of the probability t...
This Essay, prepared in connection with the Marquette University Conference on Plea Bargaining: Unde...
A behavioral economics literature identifies how behaviorally-derived assumptions affect the economi...
Cognitive researchers have identified numerous ways in which human reasoning diverges from the ratio...
New work on heuristics and biases has explored the role of emotions and affect; the idea of “dual pr...
This dissertation incorporates the study of heuristics into the field of judicial behavior. Heuristi...
This Essay explores the concept of attorney competence in a criminal justice system dominated by ple...
The paper criticizes criminal law scholarship for helping to construct and failing to expose analyti...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
Behavioral studies indicate that individuals do not always make objective decisions about risk. Vari...
This commentary examines the issue of judicial bias in response to the chapter, The Psychology of th...
article published in law reviewIn this essay, written for a symposium on The Emerging Interdisciplin...
Although economists have been actively engaged in research on criminal sentencing, the synergies bet...
In this Essay I first review the standard law-and-economics model of how rational potential criminal...
Economic analyses of criminal law are frequently and heavily criticized for being unable to explain ...
Ambiguity aversion is a person\u27s rational attitude towards the indeterminacy of the probability t...