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1 Nov 2017, 9:27 am by NELB Staff
Recently posted on SSRN: "'Better Off, as Judged by Themselves': Bounded Rationality and Nudging" CASS R. [read post]
21 Oct 2017, 8:58 pm
"Originalism": Law professor Cass R. [read post]
16 Oct 2017, 6:26 pm by Brian Hollar
(I'd also highly recommend Khaneman's Thinking, Fast and Slow which students also enjoyed.)Thaler also co-authored the book, Nudge, with Cass Sunstein in which they outline many of their ideas for how behavioral economics can be used by policy makers to help improve social outcomes in a wide variety of settings.Thaler and Khaneman both contributed to the discovery of the Endowment Effect (along with Knetsch) which demonstrates that people value… [read post]
15 Oct 2017, 9:03 pm
"The Morality of Administrative Law": Law professor Cass R. [read post]
13 Oct 2017, 8:55 am by Ilya Somin
Some behavioral economics scholars – including Thaler’s frequent coauthor Cass Sunstein – argue that instead of relying on the normal democratic process to address cognitive bias, we should delegate more power to expert bureaucracies. [read post]
13 Oct 2017, 3:00 am by Biglaw Investor
Behavioral econ is the best thing to happen to the field in generations, and Thaler showed the way https://t.co/dgHaUAlgAq — Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) October 9, 2017 You may know Richard Thaler through his work on Nudge, the book he co-authored with Cass Sunstein in 2009 that examined how we make decisions. [read post]
10 Oct 2017, 10:08 am by June Casey
”— Barbara Kiviat, Time “Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein’s Nudge is a wonderful book: more fun than any important book has a right to be—and yet it is truly both. [read post]
9 Oct 2017, 9:05 pm by Walter Olson
In the mail: Thom Lambert (University of Missouri School of Law), “How to Regulate: A Guide for Policymakers” from Cambridge, with blurbs from Cass Sunstein and the Hon. [read post]
9 Oct 2017, 5:40 am by Jonathan H. Adler
  Here is a paper he co-authored on behavioral approaches to law and economics, and here’s a paper by Harvard University’s Cass Sunstein summarizing the significance of some of Thaler’s work. [read post]
3 Oct 2017, 5:23 pm by Adam Gillette
That suggestion is simply not true.This article by Cass Sunstein begins with a discussion of former United States Supreme Court Chief Justice Warren Burger’s view that the interpretation of the Second Amendment as enshrining an individual right to own guns is “one of the great pieces of fraud-I repeat the word ‘fraud’-on the American public” that Chief Justice Burger ever saw. [read post]
14 Sep 2017, 5:30 am by Bob Bauer
In the New York Review of Books, Noah Feldman and Jacob Weisberg review two of them—one by Allen Lichtman and the other, soon to be published by Cass Sunstein—and the reviewers supply their own observations. [read post]
12 Sep 2017, 4:36 am by Jack Goldsmith
As Cass Sunstein lamented in his book #Republic, “Members of a democratic public will not do well if they are unable to appreciate the views of their fellow citizens, if they believe ‘fake news,’ or if they see one another as enemies or adversaries in some kind of war. [read post]
5 Sep 2017, 3:30 am by Elizabeth Weeks Leonard
The book builds on a deep and provocative foundation of earlier scholars, including Kenneth Arrow, Cass Sunstein, and Richard Thaler. [read post]
1 Sep 2017, 10:30 am by Jane Chong
Treason and bribery are crimes, but none of the most important legal authorities on the subject—Charles Black, Raoul Berger, Cass Sunstein, Michael Gerhardt, Richard Posner, or Ronald Rotunda, to name a few—believe that only crimes qualify for the last and most important bucket of impeachable offenses, "high Crimes and Misdemeanors. [read post]
1 Sep 2017, 9:11 am by Ron Coleman
” Among those casually “dissed” by this footnote were no less a scholar than the eminent Cass Sunstein. [read post]