Results for 'quantitative research method'
Forum: Service Delivery, Resource Allocation, and Access to Justice: Greiner and Pattanayak and the Research Imperative
representation. Even as they emphasize that identifying methodological research flaws is different from saying the findings are wrong, they conclude
Evidence-Based Transitional Justice: Incorporating Public Opinion into the Field, with New Data from Iraq and Ukraine
methodological advances in the study of public attitudes about transitional justice through quantitative surveys and qualitative interview methods provide
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Financial Regulation: Case Studies and Implications
be discounted to present value. Completing a full, quantified CBA of CBA would require evidence and new research methods: studies of the degree to
Forum: Good and Bad Patient Involvement: Implementing the Patient-Involvement Provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act at the FDA
makers.” While stimulating this kind of research is important, industry-funded patient-experience studies based on biased methods could be used to push
Forum: Economists in the Room at the SEC
opinion earlier this year praising an SEC economic analysis. The SEC has begun conducting and publishing important empirical research on financial markets
Systemic Triage: Implicit Racial Bias in the Criminal Courtroom
courtroom actors into changing them. However, I argue that the problem of racial bias is not so limited. Rather, research from the past several decades
Forum: Cost-Benefit Analysis of Financial Regulations: A Response to Criticisms
scrutinized by academics. The Fed should also sponsor additional research that evaluates its assumptions and methods. Even if, in the end, a large range of
Forum: Electoral Adequacy
democratic structures is unique, the notion that theory, policy (through quantitative research), and politics should inform our pursuits is indebted to
Leviathan and Interpretive Revolution: The Administrative State, the Judiciary, and the Rise of Legislative History, 1890-1950
legislation as to justify such a method.” In 1953, the first edition of Effective Legal Research, by the Columbia law librarians, held up federal agencies as
The Age of Consent
” quantitative methodology so favored by political scientists engaged in the study of judicial behavior, we will never really solve the mystery and reach the