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We present a positive political theory of criminal sentencing and test it using data from the U.S. Sentencing Commission. Under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, judges can use offense-level adjustments (fact-based decision making) to lengthen or shorten the Guidelines' presumptive sentences....
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The Behavioral Economics of Accuracy and Discrimination at Trial -- Truth Standards in Behavioral Law and Economics -- The Fundamental Attribution Error and Accuracy in Trial Settings: Judges vs Jurors -- Implicit Racial Biases in Tort Trials -- Gender and Race-Based Statistical Tables in...
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This paper shows that courts are not only a crucial part of the rule of law in the conventional sense but that they can also serve an important function in revealing information regarding the performance of lower level governments to the central government, and thereby improve their performance....
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Climate change has stimulated growing interest in the influence of temperature on cognition, mood and decision making. This paper is the first investigation of the impact of temperature on the outcomes of criminal court cases. It is motivated by Heyes and Saberian (2019, AEJ: Applied Economics),...
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