We can observe and measure how legal decision makers use formal legal authorities, but there is no way to empirically test the determinative capacity of legal doctrine itself. Yet discussions of empirical studies of judicial behavior sometimes conflate judges\u27 attention to legal rules with legal rules determining outcomes. Doctrinal determinacy is not the same thing as legal predictability. The extent to which legal outcomes are predictable in given contexts is surely testable empirically. But the idea that doctrine\u27s capacity to produce or limit those outcomes can be measured empirically is fundamentally misguided. The problem is that to measure doctrinal determinacy, we would have to adopt standards of legal correctness that violate...
As the dominant approach to legal analysis in the United States today, Legal Realism is firmly ensco...
Despite the abundance of studies exposing heuristic and biased thinking in judicial decision-making,...
The idea that legal theories seek not only to explain but to evaluate the moral justification of par...
We can observe and measure how legal decision makers use formal legal authorities, but there is no w...
Legal doctrine is generally thought to contribute to legal decision making only to the extent it det...
To their credit, empirical legal scholars try to live up to the highest methodological standards fro...
The traditional theories of judicial decision-making have their differences set around the importanc...
One can divide empirical analysis of legal issues into three major branches: (1) the use of scientif...
Although the term empirical research has become commonplace in legal scholarship over the past two...
Doctrine is at the center of law and legal analysis. This Article argues that we have fundamentally ...
Legal doctrine is the currency of the law. In many respects, doctrine is the law, at least as it co...
Appellate courts, which have the most control over legal doctrine, tend to operate through collegial...
This Article proposes a novel technique for characterizing the relative determinacy of legal decisio...
From the introduction: When it comes to legal method, Holmes is well known for two claims: first, th...
Empirical Legal Studies promises a constructive coming together of empirical and doctrinal legal res...
As the dominant approach to legal analysis in the United States today, Legal Realism is firmly ensco...
Despite the abundance of studies exposing heuristic and biased thinking in judicial decision-making,...
The idea that legal theories seek not only to explain but to evaluate the moral justification of par...
We can observe and measure how legal decision makers use formal legal authorities, but there is no w...
Legal doctrine is generally thought to contribute to legal decision making only to the extent it det...
To their credit, empirical legal scholars try to live up to the highest methodological standards fro...
The traditional theories of judicial decision-making have their differences set around the importanc...
One can divide empirical analysis of legal issues into three major branches: (1) the use of scientif...
Although the term empirical research has become commonplace in legal scholarship over the past two...
Doctrine is at the center of law and legal analysis. This Article argues that we have fundamentally ...
Legal doctrine is the currency of the law. In many respects, doctrine is the law, at least as it co...
Appellate courts, which have the most control over legal doctrine, tend to operate through collegial...
This Article proposes a novel technique for characterizing the relative determinacy of legal decisio...
From the introduction: When it comes to legal method, Holmes is well known for two claims: first, th...
Empirical Legal Studies promises a constructive coming together of empirical and doctrinal legal res...
As the dominant approach to legal analysis in the United States today, Legal Realism is firmly ensco...
Despite the abundance of studies exposing heuristic and biased thinking in judicial decision-making,...
The idea that legal theories seek not only to explain but to evaluate the moral justification of par...