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Written by Stratos Pahis,
Wednesday, 27 May 2009
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118 Yale L.J. 1900 (2009).
Recent surveys and events indicate that judicial corruption
could be a significant problem in the United States. This Note builds an
economic model of bribery to better understand the incentives behind this
pernicious phenomenon. It then compiles a data set of discovered incidents of
judicial bribery in the United
States to test the effectiveness of our
anti-judicial-corruption institutions. This analysis suggests that our
institutions are particularly ineffective at preventing and uncovering judicial
bribery in civil disputes and traffic hearings.
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