In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decision to litigate leads to a plaintiff success rate at trial that approaches 50 percent as the fraction of cases going to trial approaches zero. However, an extensive empirical literature has documented that plaintiffs win far fewer than half of their cases. As Priest and Klein observe, this conflict between the predictions of the model and the empirical literature may be attributable to violations in the data of the assumptions behind the simple model. Based on data from 3,529 cases, we find that multimodal case characteristics associated with violations of these assumptions cause plaintiff win rates to deviate from the 50 percent baseline i...
U.S. Juries Grow Tougher on Plaintiffs in Lawsuits, the New York Times page-one headline reads. Th...
Employment discrimination cases filed during recessions are more likely to settle after filing and l...
Abstract: Using a sample of over 1,200 tax-related cases from Spanish Courts of Appeals, and the mul...
In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decis...
Priest and Klein argued in 1984 that, because of selection effects, the percentage of litigated case...
The Priest-Klein model predicts that a decline in the plaintiff win rate might be explained by a cha...
In this paper I introduce what I call the reduced form approach to studying the plaintiff\u27s win r...
The selection hypothesis of Priest and Klein explains the selection of cases for trial, from the und...
Recent law and economics scholarship has produced much theoretical and empirical work on how and why...
This paper develops implications of the selection hypothesis of George L. Priest and Benjamin Klein ...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
General Observations on Interpreting Win-Rate Data Properly. Many empirical legal studies use data o...
The Priest/Klein model predicts both trial rates and plaintiff win rates as functions of three struc...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
U.S. Juries Grow Tougher on Plaintiffs in Lawsuits, the New York Times page-one headline reads. Th...
Employment discrimination cases filed during recessions are more likely to settle after filing and l...
Abstract: Using a sample of over 1,200 tax-related cases from Spanish Courts of Appeals, and the mul...
In their 1984 article, Priest and Klein show that a simple divergent expectations model of the decis...
Priest and Klein argued in 1984 that, because of selection effects, the percentage of litigated case...
The Priest-Klein model predicts that a decline in the plaintiff win rate might be explained by a cha...
In this paper I introduce what I call the reduced form approach to studying the plaintiff\u27s win r...
The selection hypothesis of Priest and Klein explains the selection of cases for trial, from the und...
Recent law and economics scholarship has produced much theoretical and empirical work on how and why...
This paper develops implications of the selection hypothesis of George L. Priest and Benjamin Klein ...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
General Observations on Interpreting Win-Rate Data Properly. Many empirical legal studies use data o...
The Priest/Klein model predicts both trial rates and plaintiff win rates as functions of three struc...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
U.S. Juries Grow Tougher on Plaintiffs in Lawsuits, the New York Times page-one headline reads. Th...
Employment discrimination cases filed during recessions are more likely to settle after filing and l...
Abstract: Using a sample of over 1,200 tax-related cases from Spanish Courts of Appeals, and the mul...