“Valuing Social Data”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Columbia Law Review
2024

“Giving People the Words to Say No Leads Them to Feel Freer to Say Yes”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Scientific Reports
2024

“Researcher Access to Social Media Data: Lessons from Clinical Trial Data Sharing”

  • Law and Technology
  • Law and Social Sciences
Berkeley Technology Law Journal
2024

“Consent Searches and Underestimation of Compliance: Robustness to Type of Search, Consequences of Search, and Demographic Sample”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Empirical Legal Studies
2024

“The Failed Federalism of Affordable Housing: Why States Don’t Use Housing Vouchers”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Development Law
2023

“Effects of Communicating the Rise of Climate Migration on Public Perceptions of Climate Change and Immigration”

  • Environmental and Energy Law
  • Law and Social Sciences
2023

“Judging Guilt: Implicit Evaluations of Defendants Predict Verdicts”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Social Psychological and Personality Science
2023

“Legitimacy and Online Proceedings: Procedural Justice, Access to Justice, and the Role of Income”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Law and Society Review
2023

“Reducing Prejudice Through Law: Evidence From Experimental Psychology”

  • Civil Rights
  • Law and Social Sciences
University of Chicago Law Review
2022

“An Argument For Positive Political Theories of Data Governance”

  • Law and Technology
  • Law and Social Sciences
Georgetown Law Tech Review
2022

“Can Affordable Housing Be a Safety Net?: Lessons from a Pandemic”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Yale Law Journal Forum
2022

“Lawyers as Social Engineers: How Lawyers Should Use Their Social Capital to Achieve Economic Justice”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Michigan Journal of Race and Law
2021

“Spoiler Alert: When the Supreme Court Ruins Your Brief Problem Mid-Semester”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Perspectives: Teaching Legal Research and Writing
2020

“Olmstead v. L.C.: The Supreme Court Case”

  • Human Rights
  • Public Interest Law
  • Law and Social Sciences
Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy
2020

“Incorporating Social Science into Criminal Defense Practice”

  • Criminal Law
  • Law and Social Sciences
Champion
2020

“The Problem with Assumptions: Revisiting “The Dark Figure of Sexual Recidivism””

  • Law and Social Sciences
Behavioral Sciences & the Law
2020

“Consumer Psychology and the Problem of Fine Print Fraud”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Stanford Law Review
2020

“Domestic Violence Convictions and Firearms Possession: The Law as It Stands and as It Moves”

  • Criminal Law
  • Law and Social Sciences
Michigan Bar Journal
2019

“When Law Calls, Does Science Answer? A Survey of Distinguished Scientists & Engineers”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Daedalus
2018

“Issue on Science & the Legal System”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Daedalus
2018

“Why Hillary Won’t Be Indicted and Shouldn’t Be: An Objective Legal Analysis”

  • Law and Social Sciences
The American Prospect Longform
2016

“Justice Kennedy and the Fisher Revisit: Will the Irrelevant Prove Decisive?”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Texas Law Review See Also
2016

“Basic Emotions and the Rocks of New Hampshire”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion Review
2014

“Growing Up in Law & Society: The Pulls of Policy and Methods”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Annual Review of Law and Social Science
2013

“Appraisal Theories of Emotion: State of the Art and Future Development”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion Review
2013

“Legal Reasoning and Scientific Reasoning”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Alabama Law Review
2011

“Proud Americans and Lucky Japanese: Cultural Differences in Appraisal and Corresponding Emotion”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion
2011

“Evolution, Emotions, and Emotional Disorders”

  • Law and Social Sciences
American Psychologist
2009

“Maintaining U.S. Scientific Leadership”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Science Progress
2008

“Placing the Face in Context: Cultural Differences in the Perception of Facial Emotion”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
2008

“The World of Emotions Is Not Two-Dimensional”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Psychological Science
2007

“What Does It Mean To Be Angry at Yourself? Categories, Appraisals, and the Problem of Language”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion
2006

“Amae in Japan and the United States: An Exploration of a ‘Culturally Unique’ Emotion”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion
2006

“Shifting Sands: The Jurisprudence of Integration Past, Present, and Future”

  • Race and the Law
  • Law and Social Sciences
Howard Law Journal
2004

“How Much Do We Really Know about Race and Juries? A Review of Social Science Theory and Research”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Chicago-Kent Law Review
2003

“Confusion, Concentration, and Other Emotions of Interest: Commentary on Rozin and Cohen”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Emotion
2003

“The American Law of Association: The Legal-Political Construction of Civil Society”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Studies in American Political Development
2001

“White Juror Bias: An Investigation of Prejudice against Black Defendants in the American Courtroom”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Psychology, Public Policy, and the Law
2001

“Amicus Brief: Kumho Tire v. Carmichael”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Law and Human Behavior
2000

“Juror Comprehension and Public Policy: Perceived Problems and Proposed Solutions”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Psychology, Public Policy, and the Law
2000

“Sentimental Stereotypes: Emotional Expectations for High-and Low-Status Group Members”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
2000

“Race in the Courtroom: Perceptions of Guilt and Dispositional Attributions”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
2000

“A Classic at 25: Reflections of Galanter’s ‘Haves’ Article and Work It Has Inspired”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Law and Society Review
1999

“Through the Looking Glass Darkly? When Self-Doubts Turn into Relationship Insecurities”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
1998

“The Trouble with Hairdressers”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Representations
1996

“The Right Way To Study Emotion”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Psychological Inquiry
1995

“Are Twelve Heads Better Than One?”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Law Quadrangle Notes
1995

“Who Should Stand Next to the Suspect? Problems in the Assessment of Lineup Fairness”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Applied Psychology
1995

“Hardening of the Attitudes: Americans’ Views on the Death Penalty”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Social Issues
1994

“Stress and Health in 1st-Year Law Students: Women Fare Worse”

  • Law and Social Sciences
Journal of Applied Social Psychology
1994