Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals
Publication
, Journal Article
Levy, M
Published in: George Washington Law Review
2013
Duke Scholars
Published In
George Washington Law Review
Publication Date
2013
Volume
81
Start / End Page
401 / 447
Related Subject Headings
- Law
- 48 Law and legal studies
- 1801 Law
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Levy, M. (2013). Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals. George Washington Law Review, 81, 401–447.
Levy, M. “Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals.” George Washington Law Review 81 (2013): 401–47.
Levy M. Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals. George Washington Law Review. 2013;81:401–47.
Levy, M. “Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals.” George Washington Law Review, vol. 81, 2013, pp. 401–47.
Levy M. Judicial Attention as a Scarce Resource: A Preliminary Defense of How Judges Allocate Time Across Cases in the Federal Courts of Appeals. George Washington Law Review. 2013;81:401–447.
Published In
George Washington Law Review
Publication Date
2013
Volume
81
Start / End Page
401 / 447
Related Subject Headings
- Law
- 48 Law and legal studies
- 1801 Law