Search for: "Dan Kahan" Results 61 - 80 of 202
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
1 Jun 2012, 12:21 pm by Roger Alford
In the recent era only six law professors (Mark Lemley, Cass Sunstein, Akhil Reed Amar, William Eskridge, Robert Post, and Reva Siegel) have had more citations and only seven other law professors (Stephen Bainbridge, Lucian Arye Bebchuk, Yochai Benkler, John Coffee, Dan Kahan, Lawrence Lessig, and Benjamin Spencer) have had as many top citations as the three IL citation superstars. [read post]
8 Apr 2012, 4:54 pm by Dave Hoffman
Over at the Cultural Cognition blog, Dan Kahan has two posts up, with a third promised, on the Trayvon Martin case. [read post]
2 Apr 2012, 5:52 am by Paul Horwitz
This year's entries, with parodies of articles by Andy Koppelman, Robert Cooter and Neil Seigel, Dan Kahan, and others, were just as strong as Larry's parodies have been in the past--as David Kopel can ruefully admit. [read post]
1 Apr 2012, 7:15 am by Lawrence Solum
Dan Kahan (Yale Law School, Cultural Cognition Project) has posted Cultural Metacognition on SSRN. [read post]
1 Feb 2012, 4:35 pm by Steve Bainbridge
There's a very interesting paper by Dan Kahan on the subject, which stands as one of the few cases I know of in which a prominent legal scholar so publicly changed his mind on such a significant issue. [read post]
31 Jan 2012, 3:08 am by SHG
  Some saw the protester as drunk or unbalanced, while others had issues largely because of the over-wrought assumption that Tasers are non-lethal.There seems to be two basic mindsets at work here, the first of which falls along the spectrum of police compliance and the second along the spectrum of whether you are decisively for or against the cause, a point made by commenting lawprof Dan Kahan. [read post]
18 Jan 2012, 10:29 am by Orin Kerr
A great example is the forthcoming paper by Dan Kahan et. al., “‘They Saw a Protest’: Cognitive Illiberalism and the Speech-Conduct Distinction”, which I blogged about here: When shown a video of a protest, people evaluated whether the protest was violent based on whether they supported the cause being protested. [read post]
5 Jan 2012, 11:55 pm by Michael Heise
As you will see, Andrew's post pivots on a thoughtful comment from Dan Kahan (Yale). [read post]
2 Dec 2011, 8:46 pm by Dave Hoffman
At the Cultural Cognition Blog, Dan Kahan introduces a new project: “I’ve been asked to be part of an NAS working group that will develop a proposal on how science should figure in the training of lawyers. [read post]
30 Nov 2011, 12:44 am by Lawrence Solum
Here is the abstract: This response to Professor Dan Kahan’s recent Harvard Foreword, Neutral Principles, Motivated Cognition, and Some Problems for Constitutional Law, argues that while Kahan accurately describes the contemporary “neutrality crisis” and the consequent popular mistrust of the Supreme Court, he has mistaken its cause and thus proposes the wrong solution. [read post]
28 Nov 2011, 12:59 pm by Harvard Law Review
    Democracy’s Distrust: Contested Values and the Decline of Expertise Suzanna Sherry :: In this response to Professor Dan Kahan’s Foreword, Neutral Principles, Motivated Cognition, and Some Problems for Constitutional Law, Professor Suzanna Sherry argues that while Kahan accurately describes the contemporary “neutrality crisis” and the consequent popular mistrust of the Supreme Court, he has mistaken its cause and thus proposes the… [read post]
19 Nov 2011, 4:24 pm by Lawrence Solum
Kahan: Why is the “neutrality” of Supreme Court decisionmaking a matter of persistent political disagreement? [read post]
18 Nov 2011, 2:33 pm by Orin Kerr
(Orin Kerr) The Harvard Law Review has posted its annual Supreme Court issue, featuring a very interesting Foreword by Dan Kahan. [read post]
2 Nov 2011, 10:31 am by Peter Huang
In the interests of full disclosure, I taught at Temple law school a seminar titled Law, Emotions, and Neuroscience and co-taught at Yale law school with professor Dan Kahan a seminar titled Neuroscience and the Law. [read post]
27 Oct 2011, 6:38 pm by pittlegalscholarship
Harvard Dan Kahan (Yale Law) Illinois Adam Rosenzweig (Washington University Law) presents “Tax C.U.T. for the New Economy: Using a Dynamic, Self-Adjusting Corporate Income Tax Rate to Combat Unemployment. [read post]