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Judges in the Lab: No Precedent Effects, No Common/Civil Law Differences
Author(s) -
Holger Spamann,
Lars Klöhn,
Christophe Jamin,
Vikramaditya S. Khanna,
John Zhuang Liu,
Pavan Mamidi,
Alexander Morell,
Ivan Reidel
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the journal of legal analysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.797
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 2161-7201
pISSN - 1946-5319
DOI - 10.1093/jla/laaa008
Subject(s) - sentence , prison , law , statute , statement (logic) , political science , china , common law , civil law (civil law) , psychology , public law , linguistics , philosophy
In our lab, 299 real judges from seven major jurisdictions (Argentina, Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, and USA) spend up to fifty-five minutes to judge an international criminal appeals case and determine the appropriate prison sentence. The lab computer (i) logs their use of the documents (briefs, statement of facts, trial judgment, statute, precedent) and (ii) randomly assigns each judge (a) a horizontal precedent disfavoring, favoring, or strongly favoring defendant, (b) a sympathetic or an unsympathetic defendant, and (c) a short, medium, or long sentence anchor. Document use and written reasons differ between countries but not between common and civil law. Precedent effect is barely detectable and estimated to be less, and bounded to be not much greater than, that of legally irrelevant defendant attributes and sentence anchors.

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