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The Kids Are Definitely Not All Right: An Empirical Study Establishing a Statistically Significant Negative Relationship Between Receiving Accommodations in Law School and Passing the Bar Exam
In: 102 Oregon Law Review Vol. 102 No. 1 (2023)
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De-normalizing Racial Bias in the Bar Examination: Two Pragmatic Solutions
In: 63 Washburn Law Journal 23 (2023)
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On the Death of Diversity Jurisdiction: An Empirical Study Establishing That Diversity Jurisdiction Is No Longer Justified
In: Indiana Law Review, Band 52
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Of Bias and Exclusion: An Empirical Study of Diversity Jurisdiction, its Amount-In-Controversy Requirement, and Black Alienation from U.S. Civil Courts
In: Scott DeVito, Of Bias and Exclusion: An Empirical Study of Diversity Jurisdiction, Its Amount-in-Controversy Requirement, and Black Alienation from U.S. Civil Courts, 13 Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives 1 (2021)
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Working paper
The Power of Stories and Images in Law School Teaching
In: 53 Washburn Law Journal 51 (2013)
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The millennium problem and the marketplace of ideas: insights into freedom, responsibility, and technological development
In: Public affairs quarterly: PAQ, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 243-286
ISSN: 0887-0373
Analyzes the Year 2000 (Y2K) computer date conversion problem from an ethics in technology perspective, particularly a lack of originality in the information technology industry. The Y2K disaster, moral technology, and who is morally responsible, who should be held liable, and the need to encourage originality, freedom, and diversity.
A Return to Rationality: Restoring the Rule of Law After Daubert's Disastrous U-Turn
In: 54 New Mexico Law Review 163 (2024)
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Doubling-Down' for Defendants: The Pernicious Effects of Tort Reform
In: Penn State Law Review, Band 118
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"Doubling-Down" for Defendants: The Pernicious Effects of Tort Reform
Tort reform legislation developed as a response to a series of insurance crises and reactions that blamed the personal injury compensation system for those problems. Since measures of tort reform have been adopted, many researchers have analyzed their effects within and beyond the legal system, assessing how they affect damages, insurance claims, health costs, and physician supply. Our study analyzes an underdeveloped area of research: the effect of tort reform on the filing of cases in court. Using two databases of state court filing data over 12 years, we examine how a damages cap for medical negligence claims affects case filings in the years immediately after its adoption. With several test states, we find that when a state adopts med mal damages caps, there is a statistically significant drop of 23 percent in med mal filings. We confirm this effect by also measuring the effect of a cap's nullification, and find that in the aftermath of a cap's removal case filings increase by 29 percent. Our work can therefore confirm and quantify the effect of damages caps on case filing. Yet the finding is much more salient when we consider it in the context of a new and interesting study published in the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies. In their 2013 study, Myungho Paik, Bernard Black, and David Hyman found that filings of med mal torts have decreased in the last decade, not only in tort reform states but also in states without it! If so, our finding of a statistically significant drop in med mal filings in response to tort reform has a "doubling-down" effect: there is one reduction in filings due to tort reform, and also a background reduction in filings based on larger, non-statutory changes. We believe that our findings regarding the effect of tort reform on med mal filings and the "doubling-down" effect significantly modify the cost-benefit analysis of tort reform. The positive impacts of tort reform have been significantly oversold, and the effects of tort reform disproportionately impact certain vulnerable ...
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Onerous Disabilities and Burdens: An Empirical Study of the Bar Examination's Disparate Impact on Applicants From Communities of Color
In: Pace Law Review, 2023
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Examining the Bar Exam: An Empirical Analysis of Racial Bias in the Uniform Bar Examination
In: University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Forthcoming
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