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Causal Inference in Civil Rights Litigation


D. James Greiner


Harvard Law School

October 16, 2008

Harvard Law Review, Vol. 122, No. 2, p. 533, 2008

Abstract:     
Civil rights litigation often concerns the causal effect of some characteristic on decisions made by a governmental or socioeconomic actor. An analyst may be interested, for example, in the effect of victim race on jury imposition of the death penalty, in the effect of applicant gender on a firm’s hiring decisions, or in the effect of candidate ethnicity on election results. For the past thirty years, such analyses have primarily been accomplished via a statistical technique known as regression. But as it has been used in civil rights litigation, regression suffers from several shortcomings: it facilitates biased, result-oriented thinking by expert witnesses; it encourages judges and litigators to believe that all questions are equally answerable; and it gives the wrong answer in situations in which such might be avoided. These difficulties, and several others, all stem from the fact that regression does not begin with a paradigm for defining causal effects and for drawing causal inferences. This Article argues for a wholesale change in thinking in this area, from a focus on regression coefficients to an explicit framework of causation called “potential outcomes.” The potential outcomes paradigm of causal inference, which (for lawyers) may be analogized to but-for causation with a renewed emphasis on time, addresses many of the shortcomings of regression as the latter is currently used in civil rights litigation, and it does so within a framework courts, litigators, and juries can understand. This Article explains regression and the potential outcomes paradigm and discusses the latter’s application in the death penalty, employment discrimination, and redistricting settings.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 66

Keywords: civil rights litigation, potential outcomes framework, employment discrimination, death penalty, redistricting

JEL Classification: K41

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Date posted: October 17, 2011  

Suggested Citation

Greiner, D. James, Causal Inference in Civil Rights Litigation (October 16, 2008). Harvard Law Review, Vol. 122, No. 2, p. 533, 2008. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1944984

Contact Information

Daniel Greiner (Contact Author)
Harvard Law School ( email )
1575 Massachusetts
Hauser 406
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
(617) 496-4643 (Phone)
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