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Full-Text Articles in Law

Color Commentators Of The Bench, Adam Benforado Dec 2010

Color Commentators Of The Bench, Adam Benforado

Adam Benforado

Featuring prominently in the last four sets of Supreme Court confirmation hearings, the judge-as-umpire analogy has become the dominant frame for understanding the role of the Justice and may also now act as a significant constraint on judicial behavior. Strong criticisms from legal academics and journalists attacking the realism of the analogy have had little destabilizing effect. This Essay argues that the best hope for shifting the public conception of the work of a Justice is to offer a counter analogy that draws from an equally intuitive and familiar context, while also capturing the core essence of Supreme Court adjudication …


Quick On The Draw: Implicit Bias And The Second Amendment, Adam Benforado Dec 2009

Quick On The Draw: Implicit Bias And The Second Amendment, Adam Benforado

Adam Benforado

African Americans face a significant and menacing threat, but it is not the one that has preoccupied the press, pundits, and policy makers in the wake of several bigoted murders and a resurgent white supremacist movement. While hate crimes and hate groups demand continued vigilance, if we are truly to protect our minority citizens, we must shift our most urgent attention from neo-Nazis stockpiling weapons to the seemingly benign gun owners among us - our friends, family, and neighbors - who show no animus toward African Americans and who profess genuine commitments to equality.

Our commonsense narratives about racism and …


The Geography Of Criminal Law, Adam Benforado Dec 2009

The Geography Of Criminal Law, Adam Benforado

Adam Benforado

When Westerners explain the causes of actions or outcomes in the criminal law context, they demonstrate a strong tendency to overestimate the importance of dispositional factors, like thinking, preferring, and willing, and underestimate the impact of interior and exterior situational factors, including environmental, historical, and social forces, as well as affective states, knowledge structures, motives, and other unseen aspects of our cognitive frameworks and processes. One of the situational factors that we are particularly likely to overlook is physical space - that is, landscapes, places, natures, boundaries, and spatialities. Our shortsightedness comes at a great cost. Spatial concerns shape legal …


The Body Of The Mind: Embodied Cognition, Law, And Justice, Adam Benforado Dec 2009

The Body Of The Mind: Embodied Cognition, Law, And Justice, Adam Benforado

Adam Benforado

Recent research from embodied cognition strongly contests the dualist notion of the mind as distinct and apart from the biological machine of the body - a conception that has powerfully shaped our laws, legal practices, theories, and institutions for centuries. According to the embodied (or grounded) cognition perspective, the body is involved in the constitution of the mind. Thus, beyond our conscious awareness, an abstract concept, like trustworthiness, may be primed by sensorimotor experience, like feeling physical warmth. This Article introduces recent insights from this budding field, discusses some of the potential implications of experiments in embodied cognition for courtroom …


The Great Attributional Divide: How Legal Policy Debates Are Shaped By Divergent Views Of Human Nature, Adam Benforado, Jon Hanson Dec 2007

The Great Attributional Divide: How Legal Policy Debates Are Shaped By Divergent Views Of Human Nature, Adam Benforado, Jon Hanson

Adam Benforado

This article, the first of a multipart series, argues that a major rift runs across many of our major policy debates based on our attributional tendencies: the less accurate dispositionist approach, which explains outcomes and behavior with reference to people's dispositions (i.e., personalities, preferences, and the like), and the more accurate situationist approach, which bases attributions of causation and responsibility on unseen influences within us and around us. Given that situationism offers a truer picture of our world than the alternative, and given that attributional tendencies are largely the result of elements in our situations, identifying the relevant elements should …