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The Content of Our Casebooks: Why Do Cases Get Litigated?

Samuel Issacharoff
New York University School of Law



Florida State University Law Review, Vol. 29, No. 4

Abstract:     
This is the 2000 Mason Ladd Lecture delivered at Florida State. It is intended primarily for law students as a guide to the different approaches to the question of why cases actually litigate. The article begins with the premise that in any dispute the only mechanism for reducing the joint welfare of the parties is to engage agents to litigate the distribution of the contested assets. Beginning with that premise, the Article traces the various explanations given for why cases do actually proceed to litigation.

The first part of the article is a rendition of the classic account from the economic analysis of law. The second, and longer, part of the Article then turns to various behavioral insights that call into question some of the simpler assumptions of the standard law and economics account of litigation. The paper includes data drawn from posing classic framing questions to the first-year body at FSU to highlight some of the behavioral considerations in litigation.

JEL Classifications: K0, K1, K4

Accepted Paper Series

Date posted: January 10, 2002 ; Last revised: March 12, 2002

Suggested Citation

Issacharoff, Samuel, The Content of Our Casebooks: Why Do Cases Get Litigated? (December 2001). Florida State University Law Review, Vol. 29, No. 4. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=295021 or doi:10.2139/ssrn.295021


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Contact Information

Samuel Issacharoff (Contact Author)
New York University School of Law ( email )
40 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012-1099
United States
212-998-6580 (Phone)
212-995-3150 (Fax)
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