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Full-Text Articles in Economics
The Right To Counsel: Criminal Prosecution In 19th Century London, Bryan Mccannon, Zachary Porreca
The Right To Counsel: Criminal Prosecution In 19th Century London, Bryan Mccannon, Zachary Porreca
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
Exploiting a novel data set of criminal trials in 19th century London, we evaluate the impact of an accused’s right to counsel on convictions. While lower-level crimes had an established history of professional representation prior to 1836, individuals accused of committing a felony did not, even though the prosecution was conducted by professional attorneys. The Prisoners’ Counsel At of 1836 remedied this and first introduced the right to counsel in common law systems. Using a difference-in-difference estimation strategy we identify the causal effect of defense counsel. We find the surprising result that the professionalization of the courtroom lead to an …
Essays In The Consequences Of Occupational Regulation, Noah J. Trudeau
Essays In The Consequences Of Occupational Regulation, Noah J. Trudeau
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports
Occupational regulation affects many people across many aspects of life. This dissertation research investigates the consequences of occupational regulation across three different areas of study: economic history, urban and regional economics, and health policy.
The first chapter investigates the historic licensing of emigrant agents. In the period following the US Civil War, firms wished to capitalize on the availability of African American labor. To do so they hired emigrant agents, also known as labor agents, to hire and help with the migration of individuals from the South. Faced with out-migration at the hands of the labor force, some southern states …