SSRN Home Search and Download Papers Browse Abstract and Paper Submission Subscribe to Networks View Briefcase Top Papers Top Authors Top Institutions

 

Abstract

 
 

References (92)

Beta

 


 


Download | Share | Email | Add to Briefcase | Buy Hard Copy

Is There a Psychology of Judging?

Frederick Schauer
University of Virginia School of Law



THE PSYCHOLOGY OF JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING, David E. Klein and Gregory Mitchell, eds., New York: Oxford University Press, 2008
KSG Working Paper No. RWP07-049

Abstract:     
Psychologists have recently begun to study the psychological dimensions of judging, but to date almost all of the research has been on lay experimental subjects. Implicit in the research, therefore, is that the judge's attributes as a human bring are more important than the judge's attribute's as lawyer and/or as judge in explaining judicial behavior. This may possibly be true, and it is relatively consistent with a Legal Realist understanding of judges and judging, but there remains a need for research directed specifically to the question whether judges by virtue of legal training, self-selection to judging, or judicial experience think and reason and make decisions differently from lay people. More specifically, when judges engage in tasks typically reserved to judges - finding and interpreting the relevant law, most prominently - are their cognitive processes different from those of lay people engaged in analogous tasks, and from those of lay people engaged in different and more fact-focused tasks? Until we can answer these questions based on systematic research, we will not know whether there is a psychology of judging at all, as opposed simply to general psychology applied to some of the tasks in which judges, like all other decision makers, engage.

Keywords: judges, judging, psychology and law, legal reasoning, judicial reasoning, judicial decision-making

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: September 21, 2007 ; Last revised: August 27, 2009

Suggested Citation

Schauer, Frederick, Is There a Psychology of Judging?. THE PSYCHOLOGY OF JUDICIAL DECISION MAKING, David E. Klein and Gregory Mitchell, eds., New York: Oxford University Press, 2008; KSG Working Paper No. RWP07-049. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1015143


Export to: Export Citation What's this?

Contact Information

Frederick Schauer (Contact Author)
University of Virginia School of Law ( email )
580 Massie Road
Charlottesville, VA 22903
United States
434-924-6777 (Phone)

Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


Paper statistics
Abstract Views: 737
Downloads: 244
Download Rank: 34,655
References: 92

© 2009 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.  FAQ   Terms of Use   Privacy Policy   Copyright
This page was served by apollo2 in 0.125 seconds.