1: Some Preliminaries
Part I: Designing Research
2: Questions, Theories, Observable Implications
3: Measurement
Part II: Collecting and Coding Data
4: Collecting Data
5: Coding Data
Part III: Analyzing Data
6: Summarizing Data
7: Statistical Interference
8: Regression Analysis: The Basics
9: Multiple Regression Analysis and Related Methods
Part IV: Communicating Data and Results
10: General Principles for Communicating and Visualizing Data
11: Strategies for Presenting Data and Statistical Results
12: Concluding Remarks
Appendix A: Supplementary Materials
Lee Epstein is the Provost Professor of Law and Political Science
and the Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law at the University of
Southern California. She has previously held posts at Northwestern
University and Washington University, St Louis. Professor Epstein
has received twelve grants from the National Science Foundation for
her work on law and legal institutions, and has authored or
co-authored 15 books, including The Behavior of Federal Judges:
A
Theoretical and Empirical Study of Rational Choice (2013, with W.M.
Landes and R.A. Posner), the Constitutional Law for a Changing
America books (with T.G. Walker), and The Choices Judges Make, with
J. Knight,
which won the Pritchett Award for the Best Book on Law and Courts
and the 2010 Lasting Contribution Award "for a book or journal
article, 10 years or older, that has made a lasting impression on
the field of law and courts."
Andrew Martin is Professor of Law and Dean at the University of
Michigan College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. He was
previously the Founding Director of the Center for Empirical
Research in the Law, and Professor of Political Science in Arts and
Sciences at Washington University, St Luis. Professor Martin has
received eight grants from the National Science Foundation, and is
the author of numerous articles in prominent law and social science
journals. Together with Professor Epstein he
teaches the Annual Conducting Empirical Legal Scholarship workshop,
offering formal training in the design, conduct, and assessment of
empirical studies and the use of statistical software to
analyze
and manage data.
Overall, this book is a worthy addition to any law library and
should be encouraged reading for legal scholars, jurists, and
government policymakers, as well as required for law students
working on their advanced legal writing projects or as research
assistants.
*Stacy F. Posillico, Reference Librarian, Gould Law Library, Touro
College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center, Law Library Journal*
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