Do past decisions bias judges? This Article argues that judges might be unduly affected by previously spent judicial efforts. Appellate courts, for instance, are more reluctant to reverse a case the larger the resources the trial judge invested.To provide empirical evidence for this proposition, this Article examines reversal rates of jurisdictional questions. As jurisdiction is independent of the merits, its resolution should not be affected by subsequent judicial efforts on the merits. Nonetheless, this study finds that the more resources that are invested on the merits of the case, the less likely appellate courts are to reverse the underlying jurisdiction determination. This correlation is statistically significant and non-trivial in si...
The U.S. District Courts resolve the vast majority of cases in the U.S. federal legal system, but we...
We investigate judicial elections’ impact on criminal case handling. We argue that judges face a tra...
published articleConventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district cou...
Why does the Supreme Court reverse Court of Appeals decisions? The answer, I argue, can provide us ...
This Article provides an examination of such complex dynamic interaction in the aftermath of the key...
We study 1,410 mandatory jurisdiction and 48 discretionary jurisdiction criminal law case outcomes i...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
We investigate theoretically and experimentally how the existence of an appeals system influences th...
Judges have a dual role: they decide cases and they determine the law. These functions are conventio...
The past decade of development by the United States Supreme Court of constitutional law related to j...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
Most critiques of the Supreme Court\u27s June 2008 decision in Boumediene v. Bush (including Justice...
This Article treats the order of decision on multiple issues in a single case. That order can be ver...
Despite the fact that Article III judges hold particular seats on particular courts, the federal sys...
The current anxiety over judicial vacancies is not new. For decades, judges and scholars have debate...
The U.S. District Courts resolve the vast majority of cases in the U.S. federal legal system, but we...
We investigate judicial elections’ impact on criminal case handling. We argue that judges face a tra...
published articleConventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district cou...
Why does the Supreme Court reverse Court of Appeals decisions? The answer, I argue, can provide us ...
This Article provides an examination of such complex dynamic interaction in the aftermath of the key...
We study 1,410 mandatory jurisdiction and 48 discretionary jurisdiction criminal law case outcomes i...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
We investigate theoretically and experimentally how the existence of an appeals system influences th...
Judges have a dual role: they decide cases and they determine the law. These functions are conventio...
The past decade of development by the United States Supreme Court of constitutional law related to j...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
Most critiques of the Supreme Court\u27s June 2008 decision in Boumediene v. Bush (including Justice...
This Article treats the order of decision on multiple issues in a single case. That order can be ver...
Despite the fact that Article III judges hold particular seats on particular courts, the federal sys...
The current anxiety over judicial vacancies is not new. For decades, judges and scholars have debate...
The U.S. District Courts resolve the vast majority of cases in the U.S. federal legal system, but we...
We investigate judicial elections’ impact on criminal case handling. We argue that judges face a tra...
published articleConventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district cou...