Abstract
The economic analysis of law assumes that court decisions are key to incentivizing people and maximizing social welfare. This article reviews the behavioral literature on court decision making, and highlights numerous heuristics and biases that impact judges and jurors and cause them to make decisions that diverge from the social optimum. In light of this review, the article analyzes some of the institutional features of the court system that may help minimize the costs of biased decisions in the courts.
Acknowledgments
Doron Teichman is Jacob I. Berman Professor of Law at the Faculty of Law of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Eyal Zamir is Augusto Levi Professor of Commercial Law at the Faculty of Law of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The authors contributed equally and are listed in alphabetical order. We thank Chaggay Yakobi for excellent research assistance. This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation (Grant No. 1372/20).
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Article
- The Impact of Behavioral Economics on the Law: Introduction
- Special Issue Articles
- The Paternalistic Turn in Behavioral Law and Economics: A Critique
- Behavioral Contract Law
- The Limits of Behavioral Economics in Tort Law
- Behavioral Economics in Plea-Bargain Decision-Making: Beyond the Shadow-of-Trial Model
- Behavioral Economics and Court Decision-Making
- The Role of Bias in Economic Models of Law
- Behavioral Biases and the Law
- The Evolutionary Force of Behavioral Economics in Law
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Article
- The Impact of Behavioral Economics on the Law: Introduction
- Special Issue Articles
- The Paternalistic Turn in Behavioral Law and Economics: A Critique
- Behavioral Contract Law
- The Limits of Behavioral Economics in Tort Law
- Behavioral Economics in Plea-Bargain Decision-Making: Beyond the Shadow-of-Trial Model
- Behavioral Economics and Court Decision-Making
- The Role of Bias in Economic Models of Law
- Behavioral Biases and the Law
- The Evolutionary Force of Behavioral Economics in Law