Introduction David Klein Part I: Judges and Human Behavior
Motivation and Judicial Behavior: Expanding the Scope of Inquiry
Lawrence Baum Multiple Constraint Satisfaction in Judging Jennifer
K. Robbennolt, Robert J. MacCoun, and John M. Darley Top-Down and
Bottom-Up Models of Judicial Reasoning Brandon L. Bartels
Persuasion in the Decision Making of U.S. Supreme Court Justices
Lawrence S. Wrightsman Judges as Members of Small Groups Wendy L.
Martinek The Supreme Court, Social Psychology, and Group Formation
Neal Devins and Will Federspiel Part II: Judging as Specialized
Activity
Is There a Psychology of Judging? Frederick Schauer Features of
Judicial Reasoning Emily Sherwin In Praise of Pedantic Eclecticism:
Pitfalls and Opportunities in the Psychology of Judging Dan Simon
Judges, Expertise, and Analogy Barbara A. Spellman Thresholds For
Action in Judicial Decisions Len Dalgleish, James Shanteau and
April Park Every Jury Trial Is a Bench Trial: Judicial Engineering
of Jury Disputes C. K. Rowland, Tina Traficanti, and Erin Vernon
Searching for Constraint in Legal Decision Making Eileen Braman
Part III: Evaluating and Improving Judging
Evaluating Judges Gregory Mitchell Defining Good Judging Andrew J.
Wistrich Expertise of Court Judges James Shanteau and Len Dalgleish
Cognitive Style and Judging Gregory Mitchell and Philip E. Tetlock
Building a Better Judiciary Daniel Farber and Suzanna Sherry
References
David E. Klein is Associate Chair and Associate Professor, Department of Politics, University of Virginia. Gregory Mitchell is Professor of Law and E. James Kelly, Jr.-Class of 1965 Research Professor, University of Virginia School of Law
"The book is truly interdisciplinary, with many chapters covering
two or three disciplines (law, psychology, and political science).
Much of the work shows a solid understanding and appreciation for
research in other disciplines...This would be a welcome text to any
undergraduate class addressing judicial politics, political
psychology, decision making, or one that specifically focuses on
the role of judges." -- Department of Political Science, University
of
Kentucky
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