Judicial Favoritism of Politicians: Evidence from Small Claims Court

01/03/2020
by   Andre Assumpcao, et al.
0

Multiple studies have documented racial, gender, political ideology, or ethnical biases in comparative judicial systems. Supplementing this literature, we investigate whether judges rule cases differently when one of the litigants is a politician. We suggest a theory of power collusion, according to which judges might use rulings to buy cooperation or threaten members of the other branches of government. We test this theory using a sample of small claims cases in the state of São Paulo, Brazil, where no collusion should exist. The results show a negative bias of 3.7 percentage points against litigant politicians, indicating that judges punish, rather than favor, politicians in court. This punishment in low-salience cases serves as a warning sign for politicians not to cross the judiciary when exercising checks and balances, suggesting yet another barrier to judicial independence in development settings.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
04/14/2023

The Self-Perception and Political Biases of ChatGPT

This contribution analyzes the self-perception and political biases of O...
research
06/04/2021

Alexa, Google, Siri: What are Your Pronouns? Gender and Anthropomorphism in the Design and Perception of Conversational Assistants

Technology companies have produced varied responses to concerns about th...
research
05/03/2023

Characterizing Political Bias in Automatic Summaries: A Case Study of Trump and Biden

Growing literature has shown that powerful NLP systems may encode social...
research
04/17/2020

Too Many Claims to Fact-Check: Prioritizing Political Claims Based on Check-Worthiness

The massive amount of misinformation spreading on the Internet on a dail...
research
10/27/2022

Quotatives Indicate Decline in Objectivity in U.S. Political News

According to journalistic standards, direct quotes should be attributed ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset