Oxford Handbook of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
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portes grátis
Oxford Handbook of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
^D%Sadl, Urska; Grendstad, Gunnar; Weinshall, Keren; Epstein, Lee
Oxford University Press
11/2024
1040
Dura
9780192898579
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
1 - Fundamentals
1: Lee Epstein, Gunnar Grendstad, Ur%ska %Sadl, and Keren Weinshall: Introduction to the Study of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
2: Nuno Garoupa: Legal Traditions and Their Relation to Judicial Behavior
3: Tom Ginsburg and Mila Versteeg: Models of Constitutional Review
4: Ran Hirschl: The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
5: Daniel Naurin and Erik Voeten: Transcending the Domestic-International Divide
2 -Approaches to Judging
6: Alexander Morell: Legalism and Professional Norms
7: Rorie Spill and Eric Waltenburg: Attitudinal Judging: Partisanship and Ideology
8: Santiago Basabe-Serrano, Lee Epstein, and Keren Weinshall: Backgrounds, Attributes, and Identities
9: Shai Dothan: Strategic Analysis
10: Lee Epstein and Jack Knight: How Personal Motivations Affect Judges' Decisions
11: Eileen Braman: Research on Cognitive Shortcomings in Comparative Judicial Behavior
3 - Data, Methods, and Technologies
12: Benjamin Engst and Thomas Gschwend: Observational Databases
13: Christoph Engel: Experiments
14: Wolfgang Alschner: Network Analysis for the Comparative Study of Judicial Behavior
15: Michael A. Livermore and Bao Kham Chau: Studying Judicial Behavior with Text Analysis
16: Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, and Kevin Quinn: Measuring Political Preferences
4 - Staffing the Courts
17: Lydia Brashear Tiede: Selecting Judges
18: Michael Nelson and Michael Burnham: Judicial Elections and Judicial Behavior
19: Anibal Perez-Linan and Andrea Castagnola: Judicial Tenure and Retirements
20: Anne Sanders: Law Clerks
5 - Advocacy, Litigation, and Appellate Review
21: Yun-chien Chang and Ching-Fang Hsu: Lawyering in the Private Sector
22: Tommaso Pavone: Agendas, Decisions, and Autonomy: How Government Lawyers Shape Judicial Behavior
23: Ivar A. Hartmann and Diego Werneck Arguelhes: Agenda Setting
24: Jay Krehbiel: The Form and Function of Oral Arguments in High Courts
6 - Opinions
25: Katalin Kelemen: Dissents and Other Separate Opinions
26: Jens Frankenreiter: Studying Judicial Citations and Citation Data
27: Elliot Ash: Language Choices
7 - Relations Within, Between, and Among Courts
28: Henrik Litlere Bentsen and Jon Kare Skiple: Leadership in Courts
29: Cynthia L. Ostberg and Matthew E. Wetstein: Panel Effects on Courts Around the World
30: Benjamin Bricker, Matthew J. Gabel, and Clifford J. Carrubba: Referrals
31: Bjoern Dressel: Judge Networks
32: Ori Aronson: Hierarchies of Justice
8 - Judicial Independence
33: Alex Schwartz: Threats to Judicial Independence
34: Brad Epperly: Developing Judicial Independence
35: Frans van Dijk: Conceptualizing and Measuring Judicial Independence
9 - Courts and Society
36: Russell Smyth: Public Opinion and Legitimacy
37: Elin Skaar: Courts and Transitional Justice
38: Courtney Hillbrecht: Compliance with Judicial Decisions
39: Gerald Rosenberg: Courts as Agents of Change
10 - On the Frontiers of Comparative Judicial Behavior
40: Kevin L. Cope: The Conceptual Challenge to Measuring Ideology
41: Jeff Staton: Research Communities and the Collective Investment in Data Infrastructure
42: Anthony Niblett: Artificial Intelligence and Judging
1: Lee Epstein, Gunnar Grendstad, Ur%ska %Sadl, and Keren Weinshall: Introduction to the Study of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
2: Nuno Garoupa: Legal Traditions and Their Relation to Judicial Behavior
3: Tom Ginsburg and Mila Versteeg: Models of Constitutional Review
4: Ran Hirschl: The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
5: Daniel Naurin and Erik Voeten: Transcending the Domestic-International Divide
2 -Approaches to Judging
6: Alexander Morell: Legalism and Professional Norms
7: Rorie Spill and Eric Waltenburg: Attitudinal Judging: Partisanship and Ideology
8: Santiago Basabe-Serrano, Lee Epstein, and Keren Weinshall: Backgrounds, Attributes, and Identities
9: Shai Dothan: Strategic Analysis
10: Lee Epstein and Jack Knight: How Personal Motivations Affect Judges' Decisions
11: Eileen Braman: Research on Cognitive Shortcomings in Comparative Judicial Behavior
3 - Data, Methods, and Technologies
12: Benjamin Engst and Thomas Gschwend: Observational Databases
13: Christoph Engel: Experiments
14: Wolfgang Alschner: Network Analysis for the Comparative Study of Judicial Behavior
15: Michael A. Livermore and Bao Kham Chau: Studying Judicial Behavior with Text Analysis
16: Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, and Kevin Quinn: Measuring Political Preferences
4 - Staffing the Courts
17: Lydia Brashear Tiede: Selecting Judges
18: Michael Nelson and Michael Burnham: Judicial Elections and Judicial Behavior
19: Anibal Perez-Linan and Andrea Castagnola: Judicial Tenure and Retirements
20: Anne Sanders: Law Clerks
5 - Advocacy, Litigation, and Appellate Review
21: Yun-chien Chang and Ching-Fang Hsu: Lawyering in the Private Sector
22: Tommaso Pavone: Agendas, Decisions, and Autonomy: How Government Lawyers Shape Judicial Behavior
23: Ivar A. Hartmann and Diego Werneck Arguelhes: Agenda Setting
24: Jay Krehbiel: The Form and Function of Oral Arguments in High Courts
6 - Opinions
25: Katalin Kelemen: Dissents and Other Separate Opinions
26: Jens Frankenreiter: Studying Judicial Citations and Citation Data
27: Elliot Ash: Language Choices
7 - Relations Within, Between, and Among Courts
28: Henrik Litlere Bentsen and Jon Kare Skiple: Leadership in Courts
29: Cynthia L. Ostberg and Matthew E. Wetstein: Panel Effects on Courts Around the World
30: Benjamin Bricker, Matthew J. Gabel, and Clifford J. Carrubba: Referrals
31: Bjoern Dressel: Judge Networks
32: Ori Aronson: Hierarchies of Justice
8 - Judicial Independence
33: Alex Schwartz: Threats to Judicial Independence
34: Brad Epperly: Developing Judicial Independence
35: Frans van Dijk: Conceptualizing and Measuring Judicial Independence
9 - Courts and Society
36: Russell Smyth: Public Opinion and Legitimacy
37: Elin Skaar: Courts and Transitional Justice
38: Courtney Hillbrecht: Compliance with Judicial Decisions
39: Gerald Rosenberg: Courts as Agents of Change
10 - On the Frontiers of Comparative Judicial Behavior
40: Kevin L. Cope: The Conceptual Challenge to Measuring Ideology
41: Jeff Staton: Research Communities and the Collective Investment in Data Infrastructure
42: Anthony Niblett: Artificial Intelligence and Judging
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
1 - Fundamentals
1: Lee Epstein, Gunnar Grendstad, Ur%ska %Sadl, and Keren Weinshall: Introduction to the Study of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
2: Nuno Garoupa: Legal Traditions and Their Relation to Judicial Behavior
3: Tom Ginsburg and Mila Versteeg: Models of Constitutional Review
4: Ran Hirschl: The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
5: Daniel Naurin and Erik Voeten: Transcending the Domestic-International Divide
2 -Approaches to Judging
6: Alexander Morell: Legalism and Professional Norms
7: Rorie Spill and Eric Waltenburg: Attitudinal Judging: Partisanship and Ideology
8: Santiago Basabe-Serrano, Lee Epstein, and Keren Weinshall: Backgrounds, Attributes, and Identities
9: Shai Dothan: Strategic Analysis
10: Lee Epstein and Jack Knight: How Personal Motivations Affect Judges' Decisions
11: Eileen Braman: Research on Cognitive Shortcomings in Comparative Judicial Behavior
3 - Data, Methods, and Technologies
12: Benjamin Engst and Thomas Gschwend: Observational Databases
13: Christoph Engel: Experiments
14: Wolfgang Alschner: Network Analysis for the Comparative Study of Judicial Behavior
15: Michael A. Livermore and Bao Kham Chau: Studying Judicial Behavior with Text Analysis
16: Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, and Kevin Quinn: Measuring Political Preferences
4 - Staffing the Courts
17: Lydia Brashear Tiede: Selecting Judges
18: Michael Nelson and Michael Burnham: Judicial Elections and Judicial Behavior
19: Anibal Perez-Linan and Andrea Castagnola: Judicial Tenure and Retirements
20: Anne Sanders: Law Clerks
5 - Advocacy, Litigation, and Appellate Review
21: Yun-chien Chang and Ching-Fang Hsu: Lawyering in the Private Sector
22: Tommaso Pavone: Agendas, Decisions, and Autonomy: How Government Lawyers Shape Judicial Behavior
23: Ivar A. Hartmann and Diego Werneck Arguelhes: Agenda Setting
24: Jay Krehbiel: The Form and Function of Oral Arguments in High Courts
6 - Opinions
25: Katalin Kelemen: Dissents and Other Separate Opinions
26: Jens Frankenreiter: Studying Judicial Citations and Citation Data
27: Elliot Ash: Language Choices
7 - Relations Within, Between, and Among Courts
28: Henrik Litlere Bentsen and Jon Kare Skiple: Leadership in Courts
29: Cynthia L. Ostberg and Matthew E. Wetstein: Panel Effects on Courts Around the World
30: Benjamin Bricker, Matthew J. Gabel, and Clifford J. Carrubba: Referrals
31: Bjoern Dressel: Judge Networks
32: Ori Aronson: Hierarchies of Justice
8 - Judicial Independence
33: Alex Schwartz: Threats to Judicial Independence
34: Brad Epperly: Developing Judicial Independence
35: Frans van Dijk: Conceptualizing and Measuring Judicial Independence
9 - Courts and Society
36: Russell Smyth: Public Opinion and Legitimacy
37: Elin Skaar: Courts and Transitional Justice
38: Courtney Hillbrecht: Compliance with Judicial Decisions
39: Gerald Rosenberg: Courts as Agents of Change
10 - On the Frontiers of Comparative Judicial Behavior
40: Kevin L. Cope: The Conceptual Challenge to Measuring Ideology
41: Jeff Staton: Research Communities and the Collective Investment in Data Infrastructure
42: Anthony Niblett: Artificial Intelligence and Judging
1: Lee Epstein, Gunnar Grendstad, Ur%ska %Sadl, and Keren Weinshall: Introduction to the Study of Comparative Judicial Behaviour
2: Nuno Garoupa: Legal Traditions and Their Relation to Judicial Behavior
3: Tom Ginsburg and Mila Versteeg: Models of Constitutional Review
4: Ran Hirschl: The Global Expansion of Judicial Power
5: Daniel Naurin and Erik Voeten: Transcending the Domestic-International Divide
2 -Approaches to Judging
6: Alexander Morell: Legalism and Professional Norms
7: Rorie Spill and Eric Waltenburg: Attitudinal Judging: Partisanship and Ideology
8: Santiago Basabe-Serrano, Lee Epstein, and Keren Weinshall: Backgrounds, Attributes, and Identities
9: Shai Dothan: Strategic Analysis
10: Lee Epstein and Jack Knight: How Personal Motivations Affect Judges' Decisions
11: Eileen Braman: Research on Cognitive Shortcomings in Comparative Judicial Behavior
3 - Data, Methods, and Technologies
12: Benjamin Engst and Thomas Gschwend: Observational Databases
13: Christoph Engel: Experiments
14: Wolfgang Alschner: Network Analysis for the Comparative Study of Judicial Behavior
15: Michael A. Livermore and Bao Kham Chau: Studying Judicial Behavior with Text Analysis
16: Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, and Kevin Quinn: Measuring Political Preferences
4 - Staffing the Courts
17: Lydia Brashear Tiede: Selecting Judges
18: Michael Nelson and Michael Burnham: Judicial Elections and Judicial Behavior
19: Anibal Perez-Linan and Andrea Castagnola: Judicial Tenure and Retirements
20: Anne Sanders: Law Clerks
5 - Advocacy, Litigation, and Appellate Review
21: Yun-chien Chang and Ching-Fang Hsu: Lawyering in the Private Sector
22: Tommaso Pavone: Agendas, Decisions, and Autonomy: How Government Lawyers Shape Judicial Behavior
23: Ivar A. Hartmann and Diego Werneck Arguelhes: Agenda Setting
24: Jay Krehbiel: The Form and Function of Oral Arguments in High Courts
6 - Opinions
25: Katalin Kelemen: Dissents and Other Separate Opinions
26: Jens Frankenreiter: Studying Judicial Citations and Citation Data
27: Elliot Ash: Language Choices
7 - Relations Within, Between, and Among Courts
28: Henrik Litlere Bentsen and Jon Kare Skiple: Leadership in Courts
29: Cynthia L. Ostberg and Matthew E. Wetstein: Panel Effects on Courts Around the World
30: Benjamin Bricker, Matthew J. Gabel, and Clifford J. Carrubba: Referrals
31: Bjoern Dressel: Judge Networks
32: Ori Aronson: Hierarchies of Justice
8 - Judicial Independence
33: Alex Schwartz: Threats to Judicial Independence
34: Brad Epperly: Developing Judicial Independence
35: Frans van Dijk: Conceptualizing and Measuring Judicial Independence
9 - Courts and Society
36: Russell Smyth: Public Opinion and Legitimacy
37: Elin Skaar: Courts and Transitional Justice
38: Courtney Hillbrecht: Compliance with Judicial Decisions
39: Gerald Rosenberg: Courts as Agents of Change
10 - On the Frontiers of Comparative Judicial Behavior
40: Kevin L. Cope: The Conceptual Challenge to Measuring Ideology
41: Jeff Staton: Research Communities and the Collective Investment in Data Infrastructure
42: Anthony Niblett: Artificial Intelligence and Judging
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.