Sentences with phrase «judicial decision making»

It remains for further analysis of judicial decision making to assess the role of legal education, public scrutiny, peer pressure, and the organizational structure of the judiciary in generating such incentives.
Indeed, judges» personal opinions are presumed to be non-factors in judicial decision making as judges are charged to uphold the letter of the law regardless of their personal beliefs.
I think we have a very appropriate UChicago styled paper on Judicial Decision Making and Stock Market Movements.
He continued that by giving legal effect to the Convention, we have transferred it out of the political arena altogether and into the domain of judicial decision making where public accountability has no place.
Judicial decision making calls for wise employment of that singular form of human thought known as legal reasoning.
Clearly, this is an area which would benefit from greater certainty as to the principles and policy rationales underlying judicial decision making.
Unified Family Court increases efficiency and is better for families by eliminating duplicate hearings, decreasing the potential for conflicting orders, creating opportunity for alternative dispute resolution and promoting more informed judicial decision making.
Judge Richard Posner and Professors Lee Epstein and William Landes applied various regression techniques to a theory of judicial decision making with its roots in microeconomic theory, discussing a wide variety of issues from the academic literature.
The application of data analytic techniques to the study of judicial decision making arguably begins with a 1922 article for the Illinois Law Review by political scientist Charles Grove Haines.
JY - Aren't you concerned that some of the less desirable aspects of political elections will influence judicial decision making?
It will also allow judicial officials to prepare more productively for · their cases and facilitate judicial decision making.
It is «The Troubling New Science of Legal Persuasion: Heuristics and Biases in Judicial Decision Making», published in the April 2013 edition of The Advocates» Quarterly (and accessible through HeinOnline).
Sumption argues that by giving legal effect to the Human Rights Convention in UK law, certain policy matters — particularly including penal policy, freedom of expression and immigration — have been transferred out of the political arena into the realm of judicial decision making where public accountability has no place.
Example analyses illustrate how to quantify the uncertainty in the measurement of judicial decision making, and how to determine if a law firm's track record is statistically significant relative to its peer group.
Indeed, the Carnegie Commission on Science, Technology, and Government's 1993 report, Science and Technology in Judicial Decision Making, referred to «widespread allegations that the judicial system is increasingly unable to manage and adjudicate science and technology... issues» (p. 11).
Judicial decision making is not supposed to take place in isolation.
From the judgment of Thomas J, I would extract one paragraph that goes to the heart of judicial decision making and that highlights the necessary connection between judicial thinking and community values.
This question is way too broad, there are literally thousands of books and journal articles about this as can be seen by simply typing «judicial decision making» into Google or, better still, Google scholar.
We've barely scratched the surface in terms of statistical and theoretical techniques which can uncover new insights about litigation and judicial decision making.
At the Land Court, Rob developed an extensive knowledge of real property and land use law and an understanding of the judicial decision making process.
THOMAS B. MARVELL, APPELLATE COURTS AND LAWYERS: INFORMATION GATHERING IN THE ADVERSARY SYSTEM 365 - 66 n. 7 (1978)(citing Victor G. Rosenblum et al., Report on the Uses of Social Science in Judicial Decision Making (1977)(unpublished manuscript available in the Northwestern University Law School Library)-RRB-.
What is the one single improvement the Judiciary could implement in order to increase public trust of the judicial decision making process?
For those interested in embedding opinion content into existing theories of judicial decision making... consider Yonatan Lupu & James Fowler's paper recently posted to the SSRN.
She teaches courses in employment discrimination, legal ethics, constitutional law, judicial procedure and judicial decision making.
The new Courts Law essay is from Suja Thomas (Illinois), reviewing Andrew J. Wistrich and Jeffrey J. Rachlinski, Implicit Bias in Judicial Decision Making: How It Affects Judgment and What Judges Can Do About It, a forthcoming book chapter in a volume exploring implicit bias in the judicial system.
Melissa Hart has been a professor at the University of Colorado Law School since 2001, teaching courses in employment discrimination, legal ethics, constitutional law, judicial procedure and judicial decision making.
See Birte Englich, Thomas Mussweiler and Fritz Strack, «Playing Dice with Criminal Sentences: The Influence of Irrelevant Anchors on Experts» Judicial Decision Making» (2006) 32 Personality and Sociology Bulletin 188, which can be found here:
I presented our paper on Judicial Decision Making and Stock Market Movements.
2013 Craig Jones, «The Troubling New Science of Legal Persuasion: Heuristics and Biases in Judicial Decision Making» (2013) 41 Adv. Q. 48.
His major recent article is «The Troubling New Science of Legal Persuasion: Heuristics and Biases in Judicial Decision Making»», published in the Advocates» Quarterly.
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