Priority queuing on the docket: Universality of judicial dispute resolution timing

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Abstract

This paper analyzes court priority queuing behavior by examining the time lapse between when a case enters a court's docket and when it is ultimately disposed of. Using data from the Supreme courts of the United States, Massachusetts, and Canada we show that each court's docket features a slow decay with a decreasing tail. This demonstrates that, in each of the courts examined, the vast majority of cases are resolved relatively quickly, while there remains a small number of outlier cases that take an extremely long time to resolve. We discuss the implications for this on legal systems, the study of the law, and future research.

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APA

Mukherjee, S., & Whalen, R. (2018). Priority queuing on the docket: Universality of judicial dispute resolution timing. Frontiers in Physics, 6(JAN). https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2018.00001

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