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Tenured public officials such as judges are often thought to be indifferent to theconcerns of the electorate and, as a result, potentially lacking in discipline butunlikely to pander to public opinion. We investigate this proposition empiricallyusing data on promotion decisions taken by senior English judges between 1985 and2005. Throughout this period
Jordi Blanes I Vidal, Clare Leaver
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American Economic Review, 2023
We propose a nonparametric test for the exclusion and monotonicity assumptions invoked in instrumental variable (IV) designs based on the random assignment of cases to judges. We show its asymptotic validity and demonstrate its finite-sample performance in simulations. We apply our test in an empirical setting from the literature examining the effects
Brigham Frandsen +2 more
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We propose a nonparametric test for the exclusion and monotonicity assumptions invoked in instrumental variable (IV) designs based on the random assignment of cases to judges. We show its asymptotic validity and demonstrate its finite-sample performance in simulations. We apply our test in an empirical setting from the literature examining the effects
Brigham Frandsen +2 more
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Annual Review of Psychology, 2020
Deceptive claims surround us, embedded in fake news, advertisements, political propaganda, and rumors. How do people know what to believe? Truth judgments reflect inferences drawn from three types of information: base rates, feelings, and consistency with information retrieved from memory.
Nadia M, Brashier, Elizabeth J, Marsh
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Deceptive claims surround us, embedded in fake news, advertisements, political propaganda, and rumors. How do people know what to believe? Truth judgments reflect inferences drawn from three types of information: base rates, feelings, and consistency with information retrieved from memory.
Nadia M, Brashier, Elizabeth J, Marsh
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Comedy Studies, 2020
The courtroom is, perhaps surprisingly frequently, the site of interludes, interruptions – prone to frustration or humour when the not-so-consistently-well-oiled machinery of justice lets loose a p...
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The courtroom is, perhaps surprisingly frequently, the site of interludes, interruptions – prone to frustration or humour when the not-so-consistently-well-oiled machinery of justice lets loose a p...
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2006
Abstract Several of the preceding chapters have examined the evolution of the Court’s case law over time in particular fields. In this final chapter, that process of evolution takes centre stage and an attempt is made to set it in its wider legal and political context.
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Abstract Several of the preceding chapters have examined the evolution of the Court’s case law over time in particular fields. In this final chapter, that process of evolution takes centre stage and an attempt is made to set it in its wider legal and political context.
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