Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Jurisdiction (2)
- Jurisprudence (2)
- Medical jurisprudence (2)
- Attorney (1)
- Battle of the sexes game (1)
-
- Chicken game (1)
- Compliance (1)
- Contracts (1)
- Coordination (1)
- Court (1)
- Courts (1)
- Criminal law and procedure (1)
- Default rules (1)
- Evidence (1)
- Expressive law (1)
- Female genital mutilation (1)
- Game Theory and Bargaining Theory (1)
- Hawk-dove game (1)
- Holmes prediction (1)
- Holocaust (1)
- Infanticide (1)
- International courts and tribunals (1)
- Judge (1)
- Judge Posner (1)
- Judges (1)
- Judicial compensation (1)
- Law enforcement/Criminal justice (1)
- Legal history (1)
- Legal realism (1)
- Legitimacy (1)
- Publication
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Legal History
The Lecture Notes Of St. George Tucker: A Framing Era View Of The Bill Of Rights, David T. Hardy
The Lecture Notes Of St. George Tucker: A Framing Era View Of The Bill Of Rights, David T. Hardy
NULR Online
No abstract provided.
Contested Morality: Judge Posner On Infanticide, Slavery, Suttee, Female Genital Mutilation, And The Holocaust, Anthony D'Amato
Contested Morality: Judge Posner On Infanticide, Slavery, Suttee, Female Genital Mutilation, And The Holocaust, Anthony D'Amato
Faculty Working Papers
Judge Richard Posner locates his moral theory between moral absolutism and the "anything goes" kind of moral relativism. He analyzes whether five contested topics are subject to useful moral debate: infanticide, slavery, suttee, female genital mutilation, and the Holocaust. Each topic presents a different perspective on his own moral theory. But each one fails in a different way to place his own moral theory on a sound footing.
Coordinating In The Shadow Of The Law: Two Contextualized Tests Of The Focal Point Theory Of Legal Compliance, Richard H. Mcadams, Janice Nadler
Coordinating In The Shadow Of The Law: Two Contextualized Tests Of The Focal Point Theory Of Legal Compliance, Richard H. Mcadams, Janice Nadler
Faculty Working Papers
In situations where people have an incentive to coordinate their behavior, law can provide a framework for understanding and predicting what others are likely to do. According to the focal point theory of expressive law, the law's articulation of a behavior can sometimes create self-fulfilling expectations that it will occur. Existing theories of legal compliance emphasize the effect of sanctions or legitimacy; we argue that, in addition to sanctions and legitimacy, law can also influence compliance simply by making one outcome salient. We tested this claim in two experiments where sanctions and legitimacy were held constant. Experiment 1 demonstrated that …
A New (And Better) Interpretation Of Holmes's Prediction Theory Of Law, Anthony D'Amato
A New (And Better) Interpretation Of Holmes's Prediction Theory Of Law, Anthony D'Amato
Faculty Working Papers
Holmes's famous 1897 theory that law is a prediction of what courts will do in fact slowly changed the way law schools taught law until, by the mid-1920s legal realism took over the curriculum. The legal realists argued that judges decide cases on all kinds of objective and subjective reasons including precedents. If law schools wanted to train future lawyers to be effective, they should be exposed to collateral subjects that might influence judges: law and society, law and literature, and so forth. But the standard interpretation has been a huge mistake. It treats law as analogous to weather forecasting: …
Judicial Compensation And The Definition Of Judicial Power In The Early Republic, James E. Pfander
Judicial Compensation And The Definition Of Judicial Power In The Early Republic, James E. Pfander
Faculty Working Papers
Article III's provision for the compensation of federal judges has been much celebrated for the no-diminution provision that forecloses judicial pay cuts. But other features of Article III's compensation provision have largely escaped notice. In particular, little attention has been paid to the framers' apparent expectation that Congress would compensate federal judges with salaries alone, payable from the treasury at stated times. Article III's presumption in favor of salary-based compensation may rule out fee-based compensation, which was a common form of judicial compensation in England and the colonies but had grown controversial by the time of the framing. Among other …